‘I Have Heard from Some Teachers’: the Second-Century Struggle for Forgiveness and Reconciliation

2004 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 5-28
Author(s):  
Christine Trevett

In the close-knit valleys communities of South Wales where I was brought up, some fingers are still pointed at ‘the scab’, the miner who, for whatever reason, did not show solidarity in the strike of 1984-5, cement the definition between ‘them’ and ‘us’. In trouble-torn Palestine of the twenty-first century, or among the paramilitary groups of Northern Ireland today, suspected informers are summarily assassinated. In South Africa, the Truth and Reconciliation Committee continues its work in the post-apartheid era. In second-century Rome and elsewhere, the ‘brothers’ and ‘sisters’ who made up the fictive kinship groups – the churches – in the growing but illicit cult of the Christians were conscious both of their own vulnerability to outside opinion and of their failures in relation to their co-religionists. The questions which they asked, too, were questions about reconciliation and/or (spiritual) death.

Author(s):  

Abstract A new distribution map is provided for Guignardia fulvida Sanderson. Hosts: Flax (Linum usitatissimum), Cotton (Gossypium). Information is given on the geographical distribution in AFRICA, Kenya (McDonald), South Africa, ASIA, Japan (Fujioka), USSR (Pskov Regin, Sverdlovsk, E. Siberia), (Naoumoff), Kazakhstan, AUSTRALASIA & OCEANIA, Australia (Queensland), Victoria, Western Australia, New South Wales, Tas., New Zealand, EUROPE, Belgium, Britain & Northern Ireland, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Irish Republic, Italy ?, Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, USSR, Latvia, Lithuania (Brundza), Lithuania, NORTH AMERICA, Canada (Alberta, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Saskatchewan), (Manitoba, Quebec), USA (Arizona, California, Iowa, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnisota, North Dakota, Oregon).


Literator ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.J. Cloete

In examining aspects of identity in “The Pickup” (2001), Nadine Gordimer’s latest novel, this article indicates new trends in postapartheid South African English literature as well. In the article it is indicated that identity has always been an important theme in Gordimer’s novels. Her earlier novels tend to focus on her characters’ struggle to attain political or racial rather than personal freedom, while her later novels increasingly tend to examine the construction of individual identities. “The Pickup” has continued this search for identity, but against a new and interesting perspective, a perspective that is in line with the political transformation of post-apartheid South Africa after 1994. Moreover, this theme is extremely relevant in the twenty-first century with its increased emphasis on place and globalisation. This article thus examines the theme of identity in “The Pickup”, first against a South African background and then against the backdrop of an unknown town somewhere in the desert – most probably in Northern Africa.


1968 ◽  
Vol 72 (695) ◽  
pp. 911-914
Author(s):  
R. Stanton-Jones

The introduction to a book called “An Anthology of Partly Baked Ideas” states that it was compiled to provide an opportunity for the publication of ideas either half or partly baked, which might not otherwise be suitable for publication in established learned journals. However, the Royal Aeronautical Society's decision to solicit articles on aeronautical achievement in the latter half of the twenty-first century is a direct invitation from a learned society to expound on, what at best, can only be some very partly baked ideas. The author of this admirable anthology, I. J. Good, has defined partly baked ideas (PBIs) in some detail in the opening chapters where he gives a clear indication that reputable scientists and engineers should at very least endeavour to incubate their proposals to the point where the degree of “bakedness” should be greater than 0·5, i.e. better than half-baked.


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