Human-animal relationships in literature; Coetzee, J. M., 1940---Criticism and interpretation; Coetzee, J. M., 1940---Characters--Elizabeth Costello; Animals (Philosophy); Animal rights
For the past four decades, scholarship on the relationship between human and
nonhuman animals has been growing inside the academy and sprouting ontological and
epistemological concerns about the status of the Humanities as an institution....
Portraits; Portrait photographs; Men; Government officials
Portrait of J.M. Finch of Kentucky, wearing his hair parted down the middle, jacket, and bow tie. One corner of the photograph is badly bent the other missing. Handwritten on back of image: J.M. Finch, Member of State Fair Board. Stamped on back:...
Three-quarter length portrait of seated man wearing hat and three-piece suit with tie. Inscription on print, lower center: "To Mr. Macauley - the finest one of them all. J. M. Stout." Title supplied by cataloger.
Side wheelers; Steamboats; Boat & ship industry; Howard Ship Yards and Dock Company
J.M. WHITE, a side-wheel packet with wood hull (312.7 ft. x 47.9 ft. x 11.5 ft.), was built at Howard in 1878. Owned by Greenville & New Orleans Packet Co., J.M. WHITE operated on the lower Mississippi River. The 276th boat built at Howard,...
Color lithograph featuring the left profile of performer Margaret Mather superimposed over a peacock feather. Born Margaret Finlayson in Canada in 1859, she was noticed by theater manager J. M. Hill and performed under contract with him from 1882 -...
Oval-shaped character portrait of left profile of actor Walton Townsend wearing a dinner jacket with white ascot. He is costumed as Captain Halliwell in J. M. Barrie's play "The Little Minister," which was performed at Macauley's Theatre...
A group of men, women, children, and dogs in front of a three-story brick house with two porches showing. On one side of the yard, a Pinto pony draws a carriage bearing a girl and a dog. On the other side, a black man drives a covered carriage...
“The metal syringes used for holding the colors can be seen clearly. The metal containers at each side are for oil, turpentine, and mastic and copal varnish.” (Dunstan, caption, p.15)