• Joshua, Book of (Old Testament)

    Book of Joshua, the sixth book of the Bible, which, along with Deuteronomy, Judges, 1 and 2 Samuel, and 1 and 2 Kings, belongs to a tradition of Jewish history and law, called Deuteronomic, that was first committed to writing about 550 bce, during the Babylonian Exile. The book, named after its

  • Josiah (king of Judah)

    Josiah was the king of Judah (c. 640–609 bce), who set in motion a reformation that bears his name and that left an indelible mark on Israel’s religious traditions (2 Kings 22–23:30). Josiah was the grandson of Manasseh, king of Judah, and ascended the throne at age eight after the assassination of

  • Josiah Allen’s Wife (American humorist)

    Marietta Holley was an American humorist who popularized women’s rights and temperance doctrines under the pen names Josiah Allen’s Wife and Samantha Allen. Holley began her literary career writing for newspapers and women’s magazines. In 1873 she published her first book, My Opinions and Betsy

  • Josias (king of Judah)

    Josiah was the king of Judah (c. 640–609 bce), who set in motion a reformation that bears his name and that left an indelible mark on Israel’s religious traditions (2 Kings 22–23:30). Josiah was the grandson of Manasseh, king of Judah, and ascended the throne at age eight after the assassination of

  • Josias, Friedrich (prince of Saxe-Coburg)

    Battle of Fleurus: …52,000 Austrians and Dutch, under Friedrich Josias, prince of Saxe-Coburg, and William V, prince of Orange, stadholder of Holland. Jourdan had taken Charleroi, in the rear of Coburg’s main forces, on June 25, after besieging it since June 12. Coburg, unaware that the town had fallen, was marching to relieve…

  • Jósika, Miklós (Hungarian author)

    Hungarian literature: Romanticism: Miklós Jósika, a disciple of Sir Walter Scott, was the first successful novelist. His first and best work, the historical novel Abafi (1836), marked a turning point for the genre. József Eötvös, who after the 1848 revolution became a political theorist, produced two of the…

  • Josipović, Ivo (president of Croatia)

    Croatia: Independent Croatia: In January 2010 Ivo Josipović, a member of the opposition Social Democratic Party of Croatia (Socijaldemokratska partija Hrvatske; SDP), was elected president. Despite his political differences with the ruling HDZ, he promised to support Prime Minister Kosor’s goals of expediting EU membership talks and fighting corruption. Nevertheless, the…

  • Josipovici, Gabriel (British author)

    Gabriel Josipovici is a French-born British novelist, literary theorist, dramatist, and short-story writer whose work is characterized by its experimental form and its attention to language. From 1945 Josipovici was reared in Egypt. He was educated at Victoria College, Cairo, and attended

  • Josipovici, Gabriel David (British author)

    Gabriel Josipovici is a French-born British novelist, literary theorist, dramatist, and short-story writer whose work is characterized by its experimental form and its attention to language. From 1945 Josipovici was reared in Egypt. He was educated at Victoria College, Cairo, and attended

  • Josippon (Hebrew work)

    Hebrew literature: The Palestinian tradition in Europe, 800–1300: …Book of the Righteous) and Josippon, a revision of Josephus’ Antiquities filled with legendary incidents—this last-named book was popular until modern times and was translated into many languages. Nathan ben Yehiel completed in 1101 at Rome a dictionary of Talmudic Aramaic and Hebrew, the ʿArukh, which is still used.

  • Josius of Tyre (archbishop of Tyre)

    Crusades: The Third Crusade: …the arrival there of Archbishop Josius of Tyre, whom the Crusaders had sent with urgent appeals for aid. Pope Urban III soon died, shocked, it was said, by the sad news. His successor, Gregory VIII, issued a Crusade bull and called for fasting and penitence.

  • Joškar-Ola (Russia)

    Yoshkar-Ola, city and capital of Mari El republic, western Russia, on the Malaya (little) Kokshaga River. Yoshkar-Ola was founded in 1578, and in 1584 the fortress of Tsaryovokokshaysk was built there by Tsar Boris Godunov. Its remoteness from lines of communication prevented any development. In

  • Joslyn Art Museum (museum, Omaha, Nebraska, United States)

    Ed Ruscha: …Ed Ruscha” (2018) at the Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha.

  • Joslyn, Matilda (American suffragist)

    Matilda Joslyn Gage was an American women’s rights advocate who helped to lead and publicize the woman suffrage movement in the United States. Matilda Joslyn received an advanced education from her father and completed her formal schooling at the Clinton Liberal Institute in Clinton, New York. In

  • Jospin, Lionel (prime minister of France)

    Lionel Jospin is a Socialist Party politician who served as prime minister of France (1997–2002) in a cohabitation government with conservative President Jacques Chirac. Born in the Parisian suburb of Meudon, Jospin inherited many of his socialist beliefs from his schoolteacher father. After two

  • Josquin des Prez (French-Flemish composer)

    Josquin des Prez was one of the greatest composers of Renaissance Europe. Josquin’s early life has been the subject of much scholarly debate, and the first solid evidence of his work comes from a roll of musicians associated with the cathedral in Cambrai in the early 1470s. During the late 1470s

  • Josquin Desprez (French-Flemish composer)

    Josquin des Prez was one of the greatest composers of Renaissance Europe. Josquin’s early life has been the subject of much scholarly debate, and the first solid evidence of his work comes from a roll of musicians associated with the cathedral in Cambrai in the early 1470s. During the late 1470s

  • Jost (king of Germany)

    Jobst was a margrave of Moravia and Brandenburg and for 15 weeks the German king (1410–11), who, by his political and military machinations in east-central Europe, played a powerful role in the political life of Germany. A member of the Luxembourg dynasty, Jobst was a nephew of the Holy Roman

  • Jost Van Dyke Island (island, British Virgin Islands)

    Jost Van Dyke Island, one of the British Virgin Islands, in the Lesser Antilles, separating the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea. It lies 4 miles (6 km) west of Tortola and adjoins Little Jost Van Dyke Island on the east. According to tradition, it was named after a Dutch pirate who lived on the

  • Jost, Colin (American comedian, actor and writer)

    Saturday Night Live: Colin Jost, and Michael Che, among others.

  • Jostedals Glacier (glacier, Norway)

    Jostedals Glacier, ice field, Sogn og Fjordane fylke (county), western Norway. It lies north of the deeply indented Sogne Fjord. The largest ice field in Europe (excluding Iceland), it is oriented northeast-southwest and extends in an irregular pattern for about 45 miles (75 km). The glacier’s

  • Jostedalsbreen (glacier, Norway)

    Jostedals Glacier, ice field, Sogn og Fjordane fylke (county), western Norway. It lies north of the deeply indented Sogne Fjord. The largest ice field in Europe (excluding Iceland), it is oriented northeast-southwest and extends in an irregular pattern for about 45 miles (75 km). The glacier’s

  • Josue (Hebrew leader)

    Joshua, the leader of the Israelite tribes after the death of Moses, who conquered Canaan and distributed its lands to the 12 tribes. His story is told in the Old Testament Book of Joshua. According to the biblical book named after him, Joshua was the personally appointed successor to Moses

  • Josue, Book of (Old Testament)

    Book of Joshua, the sixth book of the Bible, which, along with Deuteronomy, Judges, 1 and 2 Samuel, and 1 and 2 Kings, belongs to a tradition of Jewish history and law, called Deuteronomic, that was first committed to writing about 550 bce, during the Babylonian Exile. The book, named after its

  • Josyane and the Welfare (work by Rochefort)

    French literature: Feminist writers: Josyane and the Welfare) and Claire Etcherelli’s Élise; ou, la vraie vie (1967; Elise; or, The Real Life). But an equally significant impact was made by writers looking for ways of transforming masculine language for women-generated versions of feminine subjectivity. The texts of James Joyce…

  • jota (Spanish dance and folk song)

    jota, courtship dance traditional in northern Spain, particularly Aragon; also a genre of folk song that precedes and accompanies the dance or is sung only. The dancing couple hold their arms high and click castanets as they execute lively, bouncing steps to guitar music and singing. The singing

  • Jota aragonesa (overture by Glinka)

    Mikhail Glinka: …the capriccio brillante on the Jota aragonesa (1845; “Aragonese Jota”) and Summer Night in Madrid (1848). Between 1852 and 1854 he was again abroad, mostly in Paris, until the outbreak of the Crimean War drove him home again. He then wrote his highly entertaining Zapiski (Memoirs; first published in St.…

  • Jotapata, siege of (Israeli history)

    Flavius Josephus: Military career.: …to hold the fortress of Jotapata for 47 days, but after the fall of the city he took refuge with 40 diehards in a nearby cave. There, to Josephus’ consternation, the beleaguered party voted to perish rather than surrender. Josephus, arguing the immorality of suicide, proposed that each man, in…

  • Jöten (Germanic religion)

    Jötun, in Germanic religion, race of giants that lived in Jötunheim under one of the roots of Yggdrasill. They were older than and ruled before the gods (Aesir), to whom they remained hostile. It was believed that Ragnarök, the destruction of this world and the beginning of a new one, would be

  • jotter screen (theatrical device)

    theatre: The influence of Piscator: …with the innovation of the jotter screen, a small, auxiliary screen onto which facts, figures, titles, dates, and other bits of information can be projected.

  • Jötun (Germanic religion)

    Jötun, in Germanic religion, race of giants that lived in Jötunheim under one of the roots of Yggdrasill. They were older than and ruled before the gods (Aesir), to whom they remained hostile. It was believed that Ragnarök, the destruction of this world and the beginning of a new one, would be

  • Jotunheim Mountains (mountain range, Norway)

    Jotunheim Mountains, mountain range, south-central Norway. Extending for 80 miles (130 km) between Gudbrands Valley (east) and the Jostedals Glacier (west), the chain is surrounded by many lakes. The highest range in Scandinavia, its tallest peaks are Glitter Mountain (8,084 feet [2,464 metres])

  • Jotunheimen National Park (park, Norway)

    Galdhø Peak: …is a focal point of Jotunheimen National Park (1980) and is a tourist mecca during the summer climbing season.

  • Jotvingian (people)

    Baltic states: Early Middle Ages: The Jotvingians and Galindians inhabited an area to the south stretching from present-day Poland east into Belarus. The settlements of the ancestors of the Lithuanians—the Samogitians and the Aukstaiciai—covered most of present-day Lithuania, stretching into Belarus. Five more subdivisions formed the basis for the modern Latvians.…

  • Joubert, Barthélemy-Catherine (French general)

    Barthélemy-Catherine Joubert was a French general during the Revolutionary era. Joubert, son of an advocate, ran away from school in 1784 to enlist in the artillery but was brought back and sent to study law at Lyon and Dijon. In 1791 he joined the volunteers of the Ain and fought with the French

  • Joubert, Christian Johannes (South African official)

    Johannesburg: Boomtown: …dispatched two men, Vice President Christiaan Johannes Joubert and Deputy Surveyor-General Johann Rissik, to inspect the goldfields and identify a suitable city site. The new city was called Johannesburg, apparently in their honour.

  • Joubert, Joseph (French writer)

    Joseph Joubert was a French man of letters who wrote on philosophical, moral, and literary topics. Joubert went to Paris in 1778; there he came into contact with Denis Diderot and Louis, marquis de Fontanes, the latter of whom would remain a lifelong friend. Joubert married in 1793 and subsequently

  • Joubert, Petrus Jacobus (South African politician)

    Petrus Jacobus Joubert was an associate and rival of Paul Kruger who served as commandant general and vice president of the South African Republic (Transvaal). Joubert was the son of an indigent farmer-missionary who trekked his family north to Natal in 1837. When his father died, the family

  • Joubert, Piet (South African politician)

    Petrus Jacobus Joubert was an associate and rival of Paul Kruger who served as commandant general and vice president of the South African Republic (Transvaal). Joubert was the son of an indigent farmer-missionary who trekked his family north to Natal in 1837. When his father died, the family

  • Jouffroy d’Abbans, Claude-François-Dorothée, marquis de (French engineer and inventor)

    Claude-François-Dorothée, marquis de Jouffroy d’Abbans was a French engineer and inventor who in 1783 traveled upstream on the Saône River near Lyon in his Pyroscaphe, the first really successful steamboat. At the age of 20 Jouffroy d’Abbans entered the army, and a year later he became involved in

  • Jouhaux, Léon (French labor leader)

    Léon Jouhaux was a French Socialist and trade-union leader who was one of the founders of the International Labour Organisation. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1951. A worker in a match factory from the age of 16, Jouhaux soon became one of the leading propagandists of revolutionary

  • jouissance (psychology)

    Slavoj Žižek: The Sublime Object of Ideology: …but also one that incites jouissance, an excessive and simultaneously painful kind of enjoyment derived from transgressing the superego’s own prohibitions. According to Žižek, the experience of jouissance is the necessary but hidden complement of institutional authority, operating as what he called the “obscene underside of the law.” The experience…

  • joujou de Normandie (toy)

    yo-yo, a toy that falls and rises back to the hand by the unwinding and rewinding of a string attached to an axle that connects two disks of equal size and weight. The disks can be made of plastic, wood, or metal. As a person drops the yo-yo, the string that is wound around the axle releases. When

  • joule (unit of energy measurement)

    joule, unit of work or energy in the International System of Units (SI); it is equal to the work done by a force of one newton acting through one metre. Named in honour of the English physicist James Prescott Joule, it equals 107 ergs, or approximately 0.7377 foot-pounds. In electrical terms, the

  • Joule heating (electronics)

    Joule heating, in electricity, the conversion of electric energy into heat energy by the resistance in a circuit. The English physicist James Prescott Joule discovered in 1840 that the amount of heat per second that develops in a wire carrying a current is proportional to the electrical resistance

  • Joule’s equivalent (physics)

    James Prescott Joule: …unit of heat, called the mechanical equivalent of heat. He used four increasingly accurate methods of determining this value. By using different materials, he also established that heat was a form of energy regardless of the substance that was heated. In 1852 Joule and William Thomson (later Lord Kelvin) discovered…

  • Joule, James Prescott (English physicist)

    James Prescott Joule was an English physicist who established that the various forms of energy—mechanical, electrical, and heat—are basically the same and can be changed one into another. Thus, he formed the basis of the law of conservation of energy, the first law of thermodynamics. Joule studied

  • Joule-Kelvin effect (physics)

    Joule-Thomson effect, the change in temperature that accompanies expansion of a gas without production of work or transfer of heat. At ordinary temperatures and pressures, all real gases except hydrogen and helium cool upon such expansion; this phenomenon often is used in liquefying gases. The

  • Joule-Thomson effect (physics)

    Joule-Thomson effect, the change in temperature that accompanies expansion of a gas without production of work or transfer of heat. At ordinary temperatures and pressures, all real gases except hydrogen and helium cool upon such expansion; this phenomenon often is used in liquefying gases. The

  • Jour de fête (film by Tati [1948])

    Jacques Tati: …feature, Jour de fête (1948; The Big Day), a comic sketch of a postman who tries to introduce efficiency into his provincial post office. His next film, Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot (1953; Mr. Hulot’s Holiday), introduced his signature character and presented a satiric look at life in a middle-class…

  • Jour de silence a Tanger (novel by Ben Jelloun)

    Tahar Ben Jelloun: …de silence a Tanger (1990; Silent Day in Tangier), a meditation on old age; Les Yeux baissés (1991; With Downcast Eyes), about an Amazigh (Berber) immigrant’s struggle to reconcile her bifurcated identity; and L’Homme rompu (1994; Corruption), a gripping depiction of a moral quandary faced by a government employee. Cette…

  • Jour se lève, Le (film by Carné [1939])

    History of film: France: …Le Jour se lève (Daybreak, 1939). Darkly poetic, these films were characterized by a brooding pessimism that reflected the French public’s despair over the failure of the Popular Front movement of 1935–37 and the seeming inevitability of war.

  • Jourdain, P. E. B. (British mathematician)

    number game: Logical paradoxes: …given by an English mathematician, P.E.B. Jourdain, in 1913, when he proposed the card paradox. This was a card on one side of which was printed:

  • Jourdan, Jean-Baptiste, Count (French military commander)

    Jean-Baptiste, Count Jourdan was a military commander remembered as the sponsor of conscription during the French Revolutionary regime and as one of Napoleon’s marshals of the empire. After being a soldier in King Louis XVI’s army and serving in the West Indies (1778–84), Jourdan retired and became

  • Jouret, Luc (Belgian religious leader)

    Order of the Solar Temple: …in Geneva in 1984 by Luc Jouret, a homeopathic physician and New Age lecturer, and Joseph De Mambro. Its headquarters was later moved to Zürich, where a leadership council of 33 members presided, and regional lodges were set up to perform initiation ceremonies and other rites in Switzerland, Canada, and…

  • Journal (work by Michelet)

    Jules Michelet: …begun only in 1959 (Journal, vol. 1, 1959, vol. 2, 1962; Écrits de jeunesse, 1959). They record his travels through Europe, and, above all, they give a key to his personality and illuminate the relationship between his intimate experiences and his work.

  • Journal (American newspaper)

    New York World: …Randolph Hearst bought the competing New York Journal in 1895, he lured Pulitzer’s celebrated Sunday newspaper staff to the Journal with the promise of raises; all but one secretary accepted Hearst’s offer. Pulitzer lured them back to the World with raises of his own, but then Hearst made a counteroffer,…

  • journal (publishing)

    magazine, a printed or digitally published collection of texts (essays, articles, stories, poems), often illustrated, that is produced at regular intervals (excluding newspapers). A brief treatment of magazines follows. For full treatment, see publishing: Magazine publishing. The modern magazine

  • Journal (work by Woolman)

    John Woolman: …Quaker leader and abolitionist whose Journal is recognized as one of the classic records of the spiritual inner life.

  • Journal (work by Goncourt)

    Edmond and Jules Goncourt: …remembered for their perceptive, revealing Journal and for Edmond’s legacy, the Académie Goncourt, which annually awards the Prix Goncourt to the author of an outstanding work of French literature.

  • Journal (work by Gide)

    André Gide: Great creative period: …begun to keep a second Journal (published in 1926 as Numquid et tu?) in which he recorded his search for God. Finally, however, unable to resolve the dilemma (expressed in his statement “Catholicism is inadmissible, Protestantism is intolerable; and I feel profoundly Christian”), he resolved to achieve his own ethic,…

  • Journal (work by Fox)

    George Fox: Early life and activities: …and later reported in his Journal various personal religious experiences or direct revelations, which he called “openings,” that corrected, in his estimation, the traditional concepts of faith and practice in English religious life.

  • Journal (work by Bloy)

    Léon Bloy: …in form (novels, pamphlets, a Journal, exegesis), but they reveal a powerful unity of thought: through pain and destitution man is redeemed by the Holy Spirit and is awakened to the hidden language of the universe. His autobiographical novels, Le Désespéré (1886; The Desperate Man) and La Femme pauvre (1897;…

  • journal (accounting)

    bookkeeping: From journal to ledger to financial statements: A journal contains the daily transactions (sales, purchases, and so on), and the ledger contains the record of individual accounts. The daily records from the journals are entered in the ledgers.

  • journal (literature)

    journal, an account of day-to-day events or a record of experiences, ideas, or reflections kept regularly for private use that is similar to, but sometimes less personal than, a

  • Journal amoureux (work by Rolin)

    Dominique Rolin: …The Garden of Delights); and Journal amoureux (2000; “Lover’s Diary”).

  • Journal Amusant, Le (French periodical)

    Charles Philipon: … (“The Journal for Laughing”; later Le Journal Amusant), appeared in 1848 in the form of large newspaper sheets filled with woodcuts. Besides these journals, Philipon issued many occasional publications, such as Le Musée Philipon, Les Robert Macaires, Les Physiologies, and numerous political brochures.

  • Journal Communications (American company)

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: …independently, the company, now called Journal Communications, merged them in 1995, renaming them the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. In 2014 Journal Communications merged with the E.W. Scripps Company, and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel became the flagship of a new newspaper publisher, Journal Media Group, Inc. Two years later Journal Media Group…

  • Journal d’un bourgeois de Paris (medieval literature)

    diary: Journal d’un bourgeois de Paris, kept by an anonymous French priest from 1409 to 1431 and continued by another hand to 1449, for example, is invaluable to the historian of the reigns of Charles VI and Charles VII. The same kind of attention to historical…

  • Journal d’un curé de campagne (work by Bernanos)

    The Diary of a Country Priest, novel by Georges Bernanos, published in French as Journal d’un curé de campagne in 1936. The narrative mainly takes the form of a journal kept by a young parish priest during the last year of his troubled life. He records his spiritual struggle over what he perceives

  • Journal d’un curé de campagne, Le (film by Bresson)

    Robert Bresson: …d’un curé de campagne (The Diary of a Country Priest)—Bresson often fashioned his narratives in the form of a diary or case history. The stories were told exclusively from the viewpoint of the protagonist, revealing only what the central character was experiencing at the moment. One of the most…

  • Journal de Genève (Swiss newspaper)

    Journal de Genève, daily newspaper published in Geneva, Switzerland. Among French-language newspapers it was generally regarded as the best in Switzerland and one of the premier papers in the world. It was established in 1826. Like the German-language Neue Zürcher Zeitung, the Journal de Genève was

  • Journal de la liberté de la presse, Le (French revolutionary journal)

    François-Noël Babeuf: …la presse (shortly thereafter renamed Le Tribun du peuple), in which he at first defended the Thermidorians and attacked the Jacobins. When he began to attack the Thermidorians, he was arrested (February 12, 1795) and imprisoned at Arras.

  • Journal de Liouville (journal)

    Joseph Liouville: …and became editor of the Journal des Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées (“Journal of Pure and Applied Mathematics”), sometimes known as the Journal de Liouville, which did much to raise and maintain the standard of French mathematics throughout the 19th century. The manuscripts of the French mathematician Évariste Galois were first…

  • Journal de ma vie, Le (work by Bassompierre)

    François de Bassompierre: …Journal de ma vie (1665; The Journal of My Life).

  • Journal de Marie Bashkirtseff, avec un portrait (autobiography by Bashkirtseff)

    Marie Bashkirtseff: …girlishly candid autobiography in French, Journal de Marie Bashkirtseff, avec un portrait, 2 vol. (1887). Though her diary is justly responsible for her reputation, she was also a highly talented visual artist and a high-spirited feminist.

  • Journal de Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées (journal)

    Joseph Liouville: …and became editor of the Journal des Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées (“Journal of Pure and Applied Mathematics”), sometimes known as the Journal de Liouville, which did much to raise and maintain the standard of French mathematics throughout the 19th century. The manuscripts of the French mathematician Évariste Galois were first…

  • Journal de Physiologie Expérimentale (periodical by Magendie)

    François Magendie: …first periodical of experimental physiology, Journal de Physiologie Expérimentale (1821), Magendie greatly influenced the intellectual development of the renowned French physiologist Claude Bernard, one of his students (1841–43). Magendie was elected to the French Academy of Sciences in 1821 and served as its president in 1837.

  • Journal de voyage (work by Montaigne)

    Michel de Montaigne: Life: …record of his trip, his Journal de voyage (not intended for publication and not published until 1774), which is rich in picturesque episodes, encounters, evocations, and descriptions.

  • Journal des Débats, Le (French newspaper)

    Le Journal des Débats, (French: “The Journal of Debates”), former Parisian daily newspaper that was one of the most influential organs of the French press in the 19th century. Founded in 1789 by Gaultier de Biauzat to report the debates of the National Assembly, the Journal des Débats was acquired

  • Journal du Palais (work by Ledru-Rollin)

    Alexandre-Auguste Ledru-Rollin: …with his edition of the Journal du Palais, 27 vol. (1791–1837; “Journal of the Palace of Justice”), later (1837–47) to be supplemented by 17 volumes and by the Répertoire général de la jurisprudence française, 8 vol. (1843–48; “General Repertoire of French Law”).

  • Journal du voleur (work by Genet)

    Jean Genet: …autobiographical Journal du voleur (1949; The Thief’s Journal) gives a complete and uninhibited account of his life as a tramp, pickpocket, and male prostitute in Barcelona, Antwerp, and various other cities (c. 1930–39). It also reveals him as an aesthete, an existentialist, and a pioneer of the Absurd.

  • Journal et mémoires (work by Argenson)

    René-Louis de Voyer de Paulmy, marquis d’Argenson: His Journal et mémoires (published 1859–67) forms one of the major sources for the literary and political history of Louis XV’s reign.

  • Journal for Jordan, A (film by Washington [2021])

    Denzel Washington: Later movies: The Book of Eli, Flight, and Roman J. Israel, Esq.: He also helmed A Journal for Jordan (2021), a drama based on a true story about a journalist’s romantic relationship with a soldier.

  • Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik (German publication)

    Niels Henrik Abel: …Applied Mathematics”), commonly known as Crelle’s Journal. The first volume (1826) contains papers by Abel, including a more elaborate version of his work on the quintic equation. Other papers dealt with equation theory, calculus, and theoretical mechanics. Later volumes presented Abel’s theory of elliptic functions, which are complex functions (see…

  • Journal intime (work by Amiel)

    Henri Frédéric Amiel: …Swiss writer known for his Journal intime, a masterpiece of self-analysis. Despite apparent success (as professor of aesthetics, then of philosophy, at Geneva), he felt himself a failure. Driven in on himself, he lived in his Journal, kept from 1847 until his death and first published in part as Fragments…

  • Journal intime (work by Du Bos)

    Charles Du Bos: …became increasingly religious, and his Journal intime, 6 vol. (1946–55), written partly in English, is an account of the spiritual evolution that brought him into the Roman Catholic church in 1927.

  • Journal meiner Reise im Jahre 1769 (work by Herder)

    Johann Gottfried von Herder: Early life and travels: …Reise im Jahr 1769 (1769; “Journal of My Voyage in the Year 1769”), completed in Paris in December, bears witness to the change that it effected in him. Herder saw himself as a groundless being who had left the safe shore and was journeying into an unknown future. It became…

  • Journal of a Disappointed Man, The (work by Cummings)

    Bruce Frederick Cummings: …an English author who wrote The Journal of a Disappointed Man (1919), extracts from diaries that he had kept between 1903 and 1917. The book was immediately acclaimed upon publication, not only for providing a vivid insight into his passion for zoology and music but also as a poignant revelation…

  • Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation (work by Kemble)

    Fanny Kemble: …most lasting work was her Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation (1863), which was adapted from her diary of 1838–39 and issued during the Civil War to influence British opinion against slavery. Kemble returned to England in 1877 and lived in London until her death.

  • Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, The (work by Boswell)

    The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, work by James Boswell, published in 1785. The book is an account of the trip that Boswell took with Samuel Johnson to Scotland in 1773. The journal is mainly Boswell’s record of Johnson’s reactions to the people, landscapes, and customs they encountered along

  • Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, with Samuel Johnson, LL.D., The (work by Boswell)

    The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, work by James Boswell, published in 1785. The book is an account of the trip that Boswell took with Samuel Johnson to Scotland in 1773. The journal is mainly Boswell’s record of Johnson’s reactions to the people, landscapes, and customs they encountered along

  • Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon, The (work by Fielding)

    Henry Fielding: Last years. of Henry Fielding: …an account of his journey, The Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon. This work presents an extraordinarily vivid picture of the tortuous slowness of 18th-century sea travel, the horrors of contemporary medicine, the caprices of arbitrary power as seen in the conduct of customs officers and other petty officials, and,…

  • Journal of Commerce (American publication)

    Samuel F.B. Morse: …in 1827, the New York Journal of Commerce, which refused theatre advertisements. He also was a founder of the National Academy of Design, organized to increase U.S. respect for painters, and was its first president from 1826 to 1845.

  • Journal of Design and Manufactures, The (British publication)

    Sir Henry Cole: …the painter Richard Redgrave founded The Journal of Design and Manufactures, a publication dedicated to the promotion of “the germs of a style which England of the nineteenth century may call its own.” In 1848 Cole proposed an unprecedented Great Exhibition of the industry of all nations. It opened in…

  • Journal of Dreams (work by Swedenborg)

    Emanuel Swedenborg: Swedenborg’s religious crisis: It is usually called the Journal of Dreams (1743–44) and was obviously meant to be a journal of his new travels beginning in July 1743, but the rather trivial notices were suddenly interrupted. There follows instead a list of various dreams recalled from earlier years and a detailed report on…

  • Journal of Genetic Psychology (American periodical)

    G. Stanley Hall: …the Pedagogical Seminary (later the Journal of Genetic Psychology), was founded by Hall in 1893.

  • Journal of Hygiene (American publication)

    George Henry Falkiner Nuttall: He founded the Journal of Hygiene (1901) and Journal of Parasitology (1908) and edited the former until 1937 and the latter until 1933.

  • Journal of Madame Knight, The (work by Knight)

    Sarah Kemble Knight: …when it was published as The Journal of Mme Knight by Theodore Dwight, Jr. The graphic and often amusing account of her journey proved to be of enduring interest, and the Journal was frequently reprinted thereafter. It has remained a valuable historical source and a unique literary work.

  • Journal of My Life, The (work by Bassompierre)

    François de Bassompierre: …Journal de ma vie (1665; The Journal of My Life).