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Topic: Edward T. Hall


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In the News (Mon 16 Nov 09)

  
 Edward Hall - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hall presents the policy of this king in a very favourable light and shows his own sympathy with the Protestants.
Another edition was issued by Richard Grafton in 1548, the year after Hall's death, and another in 1550; these include a continuation from 1532 compiled by Grafton from the author's notes.
Educated at Eton and King's College, Cambridge, he became a barrister and after-wards filled the offices of common sergeant of the city of London and judge of the sheriff's court.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Edward_Hall

  
 Edward T. Hall - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edward T. Hall (May 16, 1914 Webster Groves, Missouri -) is a respected anthropologist and cross-cultural researcher.
In "The Silent Language" (1959), Hall coined the term polychronic to describe the ability to attend to multiple events simultaneously, as opposed to "monochronic" individuals and cultures who tend to handle events sequentially.
The foundation for his lifelong research on cultural perceptions of space was laid during World War II when he served in the U.S. Army in Europe and the Philippines.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Edward_T._Hall

  
 CSISS Classics - Edward T. Hall: Proxemic Theory, 1966
Edward Hall's theory of proxemics suggests that people will maintain differing degrees of personal distance depending on the social setting and their cultural backgrounds.
Hall is most associated with proxemics, the study of the human use of space within the context of culture.
Hall began to believe that basic differences in the the way that members of different cultures perceived reality were responsible for miscommunications of the most fundamental kind.
www.csiss.org /classics/content/13

  
 More Information on Edward Hall
PLINY HALL son of Martin, and grandson of Captain Edward Hall, was born Sept. 21, 1817.
CAPTAIN WORTHEN HALL (a picture of Worthen Hall and a facsimile of his signature accompanies this sketch), son of Darius, and grandson of Lt. Edward Hall, was born July 11, 1802.
Lieutenant Edward HALL came to town during the Revolution, bringing with him seven sons: Ezekiel, Abijah, James, Edward, John, Darius and Ezra -- and settled in the flat, south of the farm of J. Nutting.
bethg.shutdown.com /hall/hall_edward.html

  
 §1. Edward Hall. XV. Chroniclers and Antiquaries. Vol. 3. Renascence and Reformation. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21
It has been thrown at Hall for a reproach by some of his critics that he was too keenly interested in the pomp of the court, in the shows and sights of the streets.
The truth is, Hall wrote as an eye-witness as well as a chronicler, and his work is naturally divided into two parts, far distant from one another both in style and substance.
He was, moreover, the first to raise the cry of “London for the Londoners.” He hated the alien with a constant heart, and in the many quarrels which arose between the citizens and the French artificers, Hall was always on the side of the citizens.
www.bartleby.com /213/1501.html

  
 Edward Hall
His treatment of Edward IV is a translation of Polydore Vergil's work that include a few additions from de Comines regarding the affairs of England in France, a few details extracted from Fabyan and other obscure sources.
Hall was born in either 1498 or 1499.
Hall completed his work before his death in 1547 to include the twenty-fourth year of Henry VIII of 1532.
www.richard111.com /edward_hall.htm

  
 Descendants of
John Hall is shown as a resident and freeman of Newport in 1655, although this does not show the actual date he became a freeman of the colony.
John Hall was a member of the first baptist church in the colonies, which was destined to become the principal source of the great Baptist family of churches in the United States.
This Sylvester Hall was with a Benajah Hall in the 9th Regiment, NY Militia under Van Ness.
www.geocities.com /BourbonStreet/Bayou/3224/hall.html

  
 YOUNG, A - Online Information article about YOUNG, A
HALL (generally known as SCHWABISCH-HALL, tc distinguish it from the small town of Hall in Tirol and Bad-Hall, a health resort in Upper Austria)
HALLE (known as HALLE-AN-DER-SAALE, t0 distinguish it from the small town of Halle in Westphalia)
HALL (O.E. heall, a common Teutonic word, cf.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /YAK_ZYM/YOUNG_A.html

  
 Dr. Edward Hall Discusses Spinal Cord Injuries at Symposium / News / Mount Union College - Mount Union College
Hall is currently serving as the director of the Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center (SCoBIRC) and is a professor of anatomy and neurobiology at the University of Kentucky.
Hall also worked in the CNS Diseases Research Unit of the Upjohn Company where he worked on discovering and developing agents for the treatment of traumatic brain and spinal cord injury, stroke, Alzheimer's diseases and Parkinson's disease.
Hall, who graduated from Mount Union in 1972, began his presentation by explaining the origins of his interest in spinal cord injuries.
www.muc.edu /news/dr_edward_hall_discusses_spinal_cord_injuries_at_symposium

  
 WILLIAM EDWARD HALL - LoveToKnow Article on WILLIAM EDWARD HALL
WILLIAM EDWARD HALL - LoveToKnow Article on WILLIAM EDWARD HALL
In 1894 Hall published a useful monograph upon a little-explored topic, the Foreign Jurisdictions of the British Crown, but on the 3oth of November of the same year, while apparently in the fullest enjoyment of bodily as well as mental vigour, he suddenly died.
It is well planned, free from the rhetorical vagueness which has been the besetting vice of older books of a similar character, full of information, and everywhere bearing traces of the sound judgment and statesmanlike views of its author.
60.1911encyclopedia.org /H/HA/HALL_WILLIAM_EDWARD.htm

  
 Edward Hall
A true Inventory of the estate of Edward hall of Rehoboth [deceased] made and aprised the [...]th of March 1670 and exhibited to the Court held att Plymouth the 29th of Octeber 1571 on the oath of Ester hall widdow;
etext.lib.virginia.edu /users/deetz/Plymouth/P190.htm

  
 Edward T. Hall - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edward T. Hall (born May 16, 1914, Webster Groves, Missouri) is a respected anthropologist and cross-cultural researcher.
In The Silent Language (1959), Hall coined the term polychronic to describe the ability to attend to multiple events simultaneously, as opposed to "monochronic" individuals and cultures who tend to handle events sequentially.
Hall first identified the concept of proxemics, or personal spaces.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Edward_T._Hall   (289 words)

  
 Interview with Edward Hall
Hall cannot help who his father is and, aided by boundless enthusiasm, he is making his own bid for a place as a Hall of fame.
Hall's all-male Propeller theatre company makes the plays, with their numerous allusions to butchery, into feasts of testosterone.
Hall is fascinated by the way that domestic relationships influence public events: "Shakespeare reveals human nature brilliantly: he shines a light on our instinctive desire to dominate each other."
www.compleatseanbean.com /macbeth-press11.html   (289 words)

  
 Alibris: Edward Hall
Leading anthropologist Edward Hall analyzes the many aspects of non-verbal communication amd considers the concepts of space and time as tools for transmission of messages in this fascinating study.
Hall's most recent book studies the ways that people are tied together and yet so isolated by hidden threads of rhythm and walls of time.
These early experiences helped Hall to develop his theory of implicit culture, as he began to recognize how culture itself is at work in each person's behavior.
www.alibris.com /search/books/author/Edward_Hall   (289 words)

  
 26541. Hall, Edward T. The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996
Hall, Edward T. The Columbia World of Quotations.
They may get to know and even like their neighbors, but it won’t be because they live next door, because English relationships are patterned not according to space but according to social status.
www.bartleby.com /66/41/26541.html   (289 words)

  
 Edward Hall
Men like Edward Hall not only had the problem of dragging their feet out of the mud after every step, they also had to make sure not to rock the stretcher as this would increase the pain of the wounded man.
Although Edward Hall wanted to help the war effort, he was concerned about having to kill people and asked to be employed as a stretcher-bearer.
Private Hall was in the recent magnificent advance of the British Army in France and acted as stretcher-bearer to his company.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /EGhall.htm   (289 words)

  
 Clifford Edward Hall
Clifford E. Hall, son of Samuel and Carrie Hall, was born at Lexington September 26, 1897 and died November 13, 1918, aged 21 years 1 month and 17 days.
Clifford E. Hall was born at Lexington on September 26, 1896.
Besides his wife he is survived by his parents, five brothers, four sisters and other relatives and a host of friends who will mourn their loss.
members.aol.com /Rdkone/CliffordHall.html   (289 words)

  
 Hall, Edward on Encyclopedia.com
Edward Patten of Gladys Knight and the Pips Dies.(Census)(Brief Article)(Obituary)
This week the focus is on King Edward's School and...
WASHINGTON, D.C. - World War II veterans Edward Foley, left, of Berwick, Pennsylvania, Howard Cooper, of Staten Island, New York, and Raymond Acevedo, right, of Santa Barbara, California, meet and sha
www.encyclopedia.com /html/H/Hall-E1dw.asp   (289 words)

  
 Saint Edward's Hall, Notre Dame Magazine, spring 2002
Saint Ed's was originally built to board school boys ages 6-13 who were known as "minims." Sorin, who was fond of saying Mass for the boys, called them his "little princes," and Saint Edward's Hall was their castle from 1882 until 1928.
The hall also is noted for its large rooms with high ceilings ranging from 9½ to 13 feet.
Noted for his piety, Saint Edward built the original Westminster Abbey in 1065 (the present edifice was constructed in 1245).
www.nd.edu /~ndmag/sp2002/stedshall.html   (289 words)

  
 Hall, Edward --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Hall also spelled Halle English historian whose chronicle was one of the chief sources of William Shakespeare's history plays.
Educated at Eton and at King's College, Cambridge, Hall became common sergeant of London in 1533 and undersheriff in 1535.
The English humorist Edward Lear made famous the limerick form of verse and illustrated his work with amusing pictures.
www.britannica.com /eb/article?tocId=9000173   (289 words)

  
 20 Questions with Edward Hall
Other RSC productions, including this year's Edward III and Eastward Ho!, were due to follow until Hall made headlines this spring when he walked out of the former because of "artistic differences" and a lack of adequate rehearsal time.
Director Edward Hall - whose Propeller Theatre two-part adaptation of Shakespeare's Henry VI trilogy, Rose Rage, has just opened at the Haymarket - talks about illuminating the Bard and the best advice he got from his father, Sir Peter.
The son of Sir Peter Hall, Edward Hall has become a major theatrical force in his own right, following in his father's footsteps as a director but very much forging his own route at the same time.
www.compleatseanbean.com /macbeth-press13.html   (289 words)

  
 Edward Hall
BAM festival enlists Huppert, Hall, Zhang.(Isabelle Huppert, Edward hall, Zhang Yimou)(performances of Brooklyn Academy of Music)(Brief Article) (Daily Variety)
Seventh Annual IGFA Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony to be Held Tuesday, October 25, 2005 at 6 p.m.
Edward P. Jones, American author of `The Known World,' wins Ireland's IMPAC literary prize (AP Worldstream)
www.infoplease.com /ce6/people/A0822437.html   (289 words)

  
 SIR JAMES HALL - LoveToKnow Article on SIR JAMES HALL
His eldest son, John Hall (1787-1860), who succeeded him, was a Fellow of the Royal Society; the second son, Captain Basil Hall (q.v.), was the distinguished traveller; the third son, James Hall (1800-1854), was a painter, art-patron, and a friend of Sir David Wilkie.
(1761-1832), Scottish geologist and physicist, eldest son of Sir John Hall, Bart., was born at Dunglass on the 17th of January 1761; and became distinguished as tile first to establish experimental research as an aid to geological investigation.
SIR JAMES HALL - LoveToKnow Article on SIR JAMES HALL
www.1911ency.org /H/HA/HALL_SIR_JAMES.htm   (289 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Books: Beyond Culture
Hall was one of the influences on Robert Moran, a professor who teaches Cross-Cultural Communications at the American Graduate School of International Management (see his book "Managing Cultural Differences").
Hall introduces the concept of context as an human behavioral influence.
This is not Hall's best known book but it incorporates many of the ideas that were originally presented in the Silent Language and applies them to culture.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0385124740?v=glance   (289 words)

  
 Edward T. Hall
Edward T. Hall was born on May 16, 1914 in Webster Groves, Missouri.
Edward T. Hall did most of his work on Silent Languages.
From 1942 until 1946, Hall served in the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers in Europe and the Pacific.
www.mnsu.edu /emuseum/information/biography/fghij/hall_edward.html   (289 words)

  
 Edward T. Hall
EDWARD T. As early as in " The Silent Language," Hall said, "Experience is something man projects upon the outside world as he gains it in its culturally determined form."
The seeds of most of the major themes of Hall's lifework are to be found in " The Silent Language," if indeed, the birth of the field of inter-cultural communication is dated from the publication of this book, it is at least out of respect of the immensity of his genius.
Hall's first distinctions were between what he calls monochronic and polychronic time.
www.cs.ucr.edu /~gnick/bvdh/edward_t_hall_great_.htm   (289 words)

  
 Annotated Bibliography (2 pgs. 1 illus.) - Art of Travel - European and World Backpacking
Hall investigates how cultures are affected by unique perceptions of time.
Hall focuses on how cultures uniquely use and perceive space.
This is an incisive book by an American former professor of European comparative literature who has lived and worked extensively in Europe.
www.artoftravel.com /25bibliography.htm   (289 words)

  
 Mark Edward Hall, Horror Writer - Mark Edward Hall Author / Writer - Horror Fantasy Science Fiction
“Mark Edward Hall is blessed with a vivid imagination and the ability to force the reader to use his noggin.
Mark Edward Hall is an insightful author with the ability to craft a brilliant story.
Hall’s The Lost Village is no exception as he explores tears of blood, lost souls, apparitions, vampires, and the never ending tug of war between good and evil.
markedwardhall.com   (289 words)

  
 WILLIAM EDWARD HALL - LoveToKnow Article on WILLIAM EDWARD HALL
In 1894 Hall published a useful monograph upon a little-explored topic, the Foreign Jurisdictions of the British Crown, but on the 3oth of November of the same year, while apparently in the fullest enjoyment of bodily as well as mental vigour, he suddenly died.
It is well planned, free from the rhetorical vagueness which has been the besetting vice of older books of a similar character, full of information, and everywhere bearing traces of the sound judgment and statesmanlike views of its author.
He married, in 1866, Imogen, daughter of Mr (afterwards Mr Justice) Grove, who died in 1886; and in 1891, Alice, daughter of Colonel Hill of Court Hill, Shropshire, but left no issue.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /H/HA/HALL_WILLIAM_EDWARD.htm   (289 words)

  
 Harvard Gazette: Philosophy Department appoints Hall
Edward J.P. Hall, a leading philosopher of physics and quantum mechanics and an eminent analyst of the philosophical notion of causation, has been appointed professor of philosophy in Harvard University's Faculty of Arts and Sciences, effective July 1.
FAS Dean William Kirby said of Edward J.P. Hall (above): 'Professor Hall brings a razor-sharp analytical mind to inquiry into mainstream metaphysics.' (Staff photo Kris Snibbe/Harvard News Office)
Hall received undergraduate degrees in philosophy and chemistry from Reed College in 1987 and was awarded a Ph.D. in philosophy by Princeton University in 1996.
www.news.harvard.edu /gazette/2005/05.12/05-hall.html   (289 words)

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