- Journal of My Travels in the Year 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 Natural Philosophy, Chemistry and the Arts (periodical by Nicholson)
William Nicholson: In 1797 Nicholson founded the Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry and the Arts, which was the first independent scientific journal. The success of this periodical inspired the creation of several rival scientific journals in England that eventually drove Nicholson’s periodical out of business. Nicholson’s Introduction to Natural Philosophy (1781) was…
- Journal of Negro History, The (journal edited by Woodson)
Carter G. Woodson: …the association’s principal scholarly publication, The Journal of Negro History, which, under his direction, remained an important historical periodical for more than 30 years; it was renamed The Journal of African American History in 2002. In 1937 he launched The Negro History Bulletin (renamed Black History Bulletin in 2002).
- Journal of Physiology (British publication)
physiology: Historical background: …largely to Foster’s activities, the Journal of Physiology, which was the first journal devoted exclusively to the publication of research results in physiology, was initiated.
- Journal of Researches into the Geology and Natural History of the Various Countries Visited by H.M.S. Beagle (work by Darwin)
Charles Darwin: Evolution by natural selection: the London years, 1836–42: …through his diary’s publication as Journal of Researches into the Geology and Natural History of the Various Countries Visited by H.M.S. Beagle (1839). With a £1,000 Treasury grant, obtained through the Cambridge network, he employed the best experts and published their descriptions of his specimens in his Zoology of the…
- Journal of the American Medical Association (American journal)
American Medical Association: …of the AMA include the Journal of the American Medical Association, which is released 48 times a year, and 11 journals issued either monthly or bimonthly and devoted to such medical specialties as internal medicine, psychiatry, and pediatrics. In addition, the AMA publishes the online journal JAMA Network Open, which…
- Journal of the Operational Research Society (British magazine)
operations research: History: The first scholarly journal, the Operational Research Quarterly, published in the United Kingdom, was initiated in 1950; in 1978 its name was changed to the Journal of the Operational Research Society. It was followed in 1952 by the Journal of the Operations Research Society of America, which was renamed Operations…
- Journal of the Operations Research Society of America (American magazine)
operations research: History: …by the Journal of the Operations Research Society of America, which was renamed Operations Research in 1955. The International Federation of Operational Research Societies initiated the International Abstracts in Operations Research in 1961.
- Journal of the Plague Year, A (work by Defoe)
A Journal of the Plague Year, account of the Great Plague of London in 1664–65, written by Daniel Defoe and published in 1722. Narrated by “H.F.,” an inhabitant of London who purportedly was an eyewitness to the devastation that followed the outbreak of bubonic plague, the book was a historical and
- Journal of Zoology (British periodical)
zoo: Function and purpose: …“Proceedings,” now known as the Journal of Zoology, has appeared uninterruptedly since 1830.
- Journal pour Rire, 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 to Stella (work by Swift)
Journal to Stella, series of letters written (1710–13) from Jonathan Swift in London to Esther Johnson and her companion, Rebecca Dingley, in Ireland. Esther (Stella) was the daughter of the widowed companion of Sir William Temple’s sister. Swift, who was employed by Sir William, was Stella’s tutor
- journal, scholarly
history of publishing: Scholarly journals: The publishing of scholarly journals, begun in the 17th century, expanded greatly in the 19th as fresh fields of inquiry opened up or old ones were further divided into specialties. Numerous learned societies were formed in such fields as classical studies, biblical studies,…
- Journal, The (work by Goethe)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Napoleonic period (1805–16) of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: …fidelity, “Das Tagebuch” (1810; “The Journal”), suppressed by Goethe’s heirs on grounds of obscenity until the 20th century, reflects this new realism, and for the sophisticated and worldly wise Continental public that he met on his visits to the Bohemian spas of Carlsbad and Teplitz, Goethe composed and published…
- journal, trade (publishing)
history of publishing: Professional types: Trade and technical journals serve those working in industry and commerce. They too have grown enormously in numbers. Major discoveries in science, manufacturing methods, or business practice tend to create a new subdivision of technology, with its own practitioners and, more often than not, its…
- journalism
journalism, the collection, preparation, and distribution of news and related commentary and feature materials through such print and electronic media as newspapers, magazines, books, blogs, webcasts, podcasts, social networking and social media sites, and e-mail as well as through radio, motion
- Journals (work by Wordsworth)
English literature: Blake, Wordsworth, and Coleridge: …feeling, manifested everywhere in her Journals (written 1798–1803, published 1897), and by Coleridge’s imaginative and speculative genius, he produced the poems collected in Lyrical Ballads (1798). The volume began with Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,” continued with poems displaying delight in the powers of nature and the humane…
- Journals of Charlotte Forten Grimké, The (work by Grimké)
Charlotte Forten Grimké: The Journals of Charlotte Forten Grimké were published in one volume in 1988. Those eloquent and insightful diaries offer a unique perspective on the period of transition after the end of slavery in America.
- Journals of Mary Shelley, 1814-1844, The (work by Shelley)
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley: …of her casual writings include The Journals of Mary Shelley, 1814–1844 (1987), edited by Paula R. Feldman and Diana Scott-Kilvert, and Selected Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (1995), edited by Betty T. Bennett.
- Journals of Susanna Moodie (work by Atwood)
Canadian literature: Poetry and poetics: ” In The Journals of Susanna Moodie (1970), Atwood translated the 19th-century author of Roughing It in the Bush into a modern figure of alienation. Her Morning in the Burned House (1995) invokes popular and classical myths, the elegy, history, and the personal lyric. Ondaatje also turned…
- Journées du Septembre (French history [1792])
September Massacres, mass killing of prisoners that took place in Paris from September 2 to September 6 in 1792—a major event of what is sometimes called the “First Terror” of the French Revolution. The massacres were an expression of the collective mentality in Paris in the days after the
- Journey (American rock group)
art rock: Journey, Kansas, the Alan Parsons Project, Queen, Steely Dan, Styx, and Supertramp and the Canadian band Rush. “Arty” 1970s and ’80s British pop rock artists such as
- Journey 2: The Mysterious Island (film by Peyton [2012])
Michael Caine: …stranded adventurer in the family-oriented Journey 2: The Mysterious Island (2012) and portrayed a bamboozled insurance magnate in the heist spectacle Now You See Me (2013) and its 2016 sequel. Caine joined the ensemble cast of Nolan’s space drama Interstellar (2014) as a NASA scientist leading a team in search…
- Journey Abandoned, The (novel by Trilling)
Lionel Trilling: Titled The Journey Abandoned, it follows the attempts of a graspingly ambitious young critic to make his name writing the biography of a reclusive writer turned physicist. Trilling was married to Diana Trilling, née Rubin, also a critic and writer.
- Journey Back to the Source (work by Carpentier)
Alejo Carpentier: Viaje a la semilla (1944; Journey Back to the Source), for instance, set in 19th-century Cuba, is told in reverse, from the protagonist’s death to his return to the womb. This and other stories would be collected in the important volume Guerra del tiempo (1958; War of Time). Carpentier’s second…
- journey cake (food)
Catonsville: …local inn specializing in that type of cornbread. The present name, honouring Richard Caton (who had an estate there in the late 18th century), was adopted about 1800. A residential community, Catonsville is the seat of Catonsville Community College (1956). The Baltimore county campus (1966) of the University of Maryland…
- Journey for Margaret (film by Van Dyke [1942])
W.S. Van Dyke: Later films: …work was the box-office hit Journey for Margaret (1942), a sentimental World War II drama, with five-year-old Margaret O’Brien playing a survivor of the London blitz who is adopted by an American couple (Robert Young and Laraine Day).
- Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow, A (work by Radishchev)
Aleksandr Nikolayevich Radishchev: …iz Peterburga v Moskvu (1790; A Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow), in which he collected, within the framework of an imaginary journey, all the examples of social injustice, wretchedness, and brutality he had seen. Though the book was an indictment of serfdom, autocracy, and censorship, Radishchev intended it for…
- Journey into Fear (film by Foster [1943])
Mark Robson: Early work: After he edited the atmospheric Journey into Fear, another project with Welles (who cowrote and acted in the thriller), Robson worked on I Walked with a Zombie (1943) and The Leopard Man (1943), both of which were directed by Tourneur and produced by Lewton.
- Journey of Hope (film by Koller [1990])
- Journey of Little Charlie, The (novel by Curtis)
Christopher Paul Curtis: …of Piney Woods (2014) and The Journey of Little Charlie (2018). The Mighty Miss Malone (2012) is set during the Depression and centres on a 12-year-old girl named Deza Malone, a character that first appeared in Bud, Not Buddy.
- Journey of Niels Klim to the World Underground, The (work by Holberg)
Ludvig Holberg, Baron Holberg: …Nicolai Klimii Iter Subterraneum (1741; The Journey of Niels Klim to the World Underground). Niels Klim, originally written in Latin and published in Germany (by its Danish publisher, who wished to avoid censorship), was translated into Danish in 1742. It was adapted for Danish television into a feature-length film in…
- Journey of Reconciliation (United States civil rights movement)
Freedom Rides: …the ruling by staging the Journey of Reconciliation, on which an interracial group of activists rode together on a bus through the upper South, though fearful of journeying to the Deep South. Following this example and responding to the Supreme Court’s Boynton v. Virginia decision of 1960, which extended the…
- Journey of Tai-me, The (work by Momaday)
N. Scott Momaday: Other works: …limited-edition collection of Kiowa folktales, The Journey of Tai-me (1967), was enlarged with passages of Kiowa history and his own interpretations of that history as The Way to Rainy Mountain (1969), illustrated by his father. Native American traditions and a deep concern over humans’ ability to live in harmony with…
- Journey of the Mind to God (work by Bonaventure)
Saint Bonaventure: His Journey of the Mind to God (1259) was a masterpiece showing the way by which man as a creature ought to love and contemplate God through Christ after the example of St. Francis. Revered by his order, Bonaventure recodified its constitutions (1260), wrote for it…
- Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants (album by Wonder)
Stevie Wonder: …and overambitious extended work called Stevie Wonder’s Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants. Thereafter his recordings became sporadic and often lacked focus, although his concerts were never less than rousing. The best of his work formed a vital link between the classic rhythm-and-blues and soul performers of the 1950s…
- Journey to Italy (film by Rossellini [1954])
Ingrid Bergman: Scandal and later films: …and Viaggio in Italia (1954; Journey to Italy). During this time she married (1950–57) Rossellini, and the couple had two more children, including Isabella Rossellini, who became a noted model and actress.
- Journey to Poland (work by Döblin)
Alfred Döblin: …his Reise in Polen (1926; Journey to Poland) is a stimulating travel account. Döblin recounted his flight from France in 1940 and his observations of postwar Germany in the book Schicksalsreise (1949; Destiny’s Journey).
- Journey to the Center of the Earth (film by Levin [1959])
Journey to the Center of the Earth, American science-fiction film, released in 1959, that was an adaptation of Jules Verne’s classic novel of the same name. Especially noted for its special effects, the film was nominated for three Academy Awards. Professor Oliver Lindenbrook (played by James
- Journey to the Centre of the Earth, A (novel by Verne)
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth, novel by prolific French author Jules Verne, published in 1864. It is the second book in his popular series Voyages extraordinaires (1863–1910), which contains novels that combine scientific facts with adventure fiction and laid the groundwork for science
- Journey to the End of Night (work by Céline)
Louis-Ferdinand Céline: …bout de la nuit (1932; Journey to the End of Night), the story of a man’s tortured and hopeless search for meaning, written in a vehement and disjointed style that marked its author as a major innovator of 20th-century French literature. There followed Mort à crédit (1936; Death on the…
- Journey to the Land of Ophir (work by Shcherbatov)
Mikhayl Mikhaylovich Shcherbatov: …state is embodied in his Journey to the Land of Ophir (1784), a utopian fantasy depicting a Russia in which Peter I’s westernizing reforms have been reversed, and the nobility and the serfs are confirmed in what Shcherbatov viewed as their “natural” (and inherently unequal) relations to each other. His…
- Journey to the Volcano (work by Tremain)
Rose Tremain: …well as the children’s book Journey to the Volcano (1996). The autobiography Rosie: Scenes from a Vanished Life, which chronicles her childhood, was published in 2018. Tremain was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2007 and advanced to Dame Commander of the Order of…
- Journey to the West (novel by Wu Cheng’en)
Journey to the West, foremost Chinese comic novel, written by Wu Cheng’en, a novelist and poet of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644). The novel is based on the actual 7th-century pilgrimage of the Buddhist monk Xuanzang (602–664) to India in search of sacred texts. The story itself was already a part of
- Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland, A (work by Johnson)
A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland, book by Samuel Johnson, published in 1775. The Journey was the result of a three-month trip to Scotland that Johnson took with his biographer, James Boswell, in 1773. It contains Johnson’s descriptions of the customs, religion, education, trade, and
- Journey Without Maps (travel book by Greene)
Journey Without Maps, travel book by Graham Greene, published in 1936, that describes his first journey to Africa. Drawn from the journals Greene kept on his travels in West Africa, the book examines the internal as well as external maps people use to chart their
- Journey’s End (play by Sherriff)
R.C. Sherriff: …and screenwriter, remembered for his Journey’s End (1928), a World War I play that won wide critical acclaim.
- Journey, A (memoir by Blair)
Tony Blair: Life after the premiership of Tony Blair: …2010 Blair published his memoir, A Journey, in which he reasserted his support for the Iraq War and described his strained relationship with Gordon Brown.
- Journey, The (film by Litvak [1959])
Anatole Litvak: Later films: …worked with Litvak again in The Journey (1959), an overlong drama set in Budapest after the 1956 revolution; he played a communist officer who falls in love with an English noblewoman (Deborah Kerr) who is desperate to escape to unoccupied Vienna.
- Journey, The (poetry by Boland)
Eavan Boland: The Journey (1983), which was expanded as The Journey and Other Poems (1987), infuses mythology into her discussion of women and children. Boland’s other books of poetry included Selected Poems (1989), Outside History (1990), In a Time of Violence (1994), Anna Liffey (1997), Against Love…
- journeyman (labor)
guild: Structure and social role: …years, an apprentice became a journeyman, i.e., a craftsman who could work for one or another master and was paid with wages for his labour. A journeyman who could provide proof of his technical competence (the “masterpiece”) might rise in the guild to the status of a master, whereupon he…
- Journiac, René (French jurist and administrator)
René Journiac was a French jurist and administrator, who was President Valéry Giscard d’Estaing’s principal adviser on African affairs. A member of the French Resistance during World War II, Journiac studied law in Aix-en-Provence, France, and served as a magistrate in Cameroon before joining the
- joust (medieval sport)
joust, western European mock battle between two horsemen charging each other with levelled lances, each attempting to unhorse the other. Early medieval tournaments consisted of mêlées, mock battles between two bodies of armed horsemen; later both the mêlée and the joust took place at tournaments,
- Joutel, Henri (French adventurer)
René-Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle: Last expedition: Henri Joutel, who served under La Salle through the tragic days of the Texas colony until his death, wrote both of his fine qualities and of his insufferable arrogance toward his subordinates. In Joutel’s view, this arrogance was the true cause of La Salle’s death.
- Jouve, Pierre-Jean (French author)
Pierre-Jean Jouve was a French poet, novelist, and critic. Early in his career, Jouve was influenced by the Abbaye group and for a time published a journal, Bandeaux d’or. His earliest verses, Les Muses romaines et florentines (1910; “Roman and Florentine Muses”), Présences (1912; “Presences”), and
- Jouvenel, Bertrand de (French social scientist)
futurology: …1964 the French social scientist Bertrand de Jouvenel published L’Art de la conjecture (The Art of Conjecture), in which he offered a systematic philosophical rationale for the field. The following year the American Academy of Arts and Sciences formed its Commission on the Year 2000 “to anticipate social patterns, to…
- Jouvenet, Jean (French painter)
Jean Jouvenet was a French Baroque painter remembered for his religious works—e.g., The Miraculous Draught of the Fishes—and for his decorative ceiling paintings in the chapels of Versailles and the Invalides. Jouvenet was the most celebrated of a family of artists and was son and pupil of Laurent
- Jouvet, Louis (French actor and director)
Louis Jouvet was an actor, director, designer, and technician, one of the most influential figures of the French theatre in the 20th century. Beginning as a pharmacist at his parents’ wishes, he soon turned to his real interest, the theatre, and, after being refused admission several times to the
- Jouvin, Xavier (French inventor)
glove: …an industry in 1834, when Xavier Jouvin of Grenoble, France, invented the cutting die that made possible a glove of precise fit. The kid glove has retained supremacy as the aristocrat of gloves, but other kinds of leather are also utilized in modern glove manufacture, including capeskin, cabretta, pigskin, buckskin,…
- Joux, Lake (lake, Europe)
Jura Mountains: Lake Joux has an underground outlet reappearing as a river, the Orbe, about 2 miles (3 km) farther down. Similar underground stream sources are numerous, including the Areuse, Schüss (Suze), and Birs rivers in Switzerland and the Doubs, Loue, and Lizon in France. The largest…
- Jouy Print (fabric)
toile de Jouy, cotton or linen printed with designs of landscapes and figures for which the 18th-century factory of Jouy-en-Josas, near Versailles, Fr., was famous. The Jouy factory was started in 1760 by a Franco-German, Christophe-Philippe Oberkampf. His designs were printed originally from
- Jouy, Brillon de (French musician)
Luigi Boccherini: Early life: From Boccherini’s contact with Madame Brillon de Jouy, the harpsichordist, came the Six Sonatas for Harpsichord and Violin, G 25–30.
- Jouy-en-Josas (factory, France)
toile de Jouy: …which the 18th-century factory of Jouy-en-Josas, near Versailles, Fr., was famous. The Jouy factory was started in 1760 by a Franco-German, Christophe-Philippe Oberkampf. His designs were printed originally from woodblocks alone but from 1770 from copperplates as well, this innovation having been anticipated in England in 1757. English printed cottons…
- Jovanović, Slobodan (prime minister of Yugoslavia)
Slobodan Jovanović was a Serbian jurist, historian, and statesman, prime minister in the Yugoslav government-in-exile during World War II (January 11, 1942–June 26, 1943). Liberal in his social and political views, he was perhaps Yugoslavia’s greatest authority on constitutional law; also a master
- Jove (Roman god)
Jupiter, the chief ancient Roman and Italian god. Like Zeus, the Greek god with whom he is etymologically identical (root diu, “bright”), Jupiter was a sky god. One of his most ancient epithets is Lucetius (“Light-Bringer”); and later literature has preserved the same idea in such phrases as sub
- Jovellanos Institute (school, Gijón, Spain)
Gijón: …of Culture, and the former Jovellanos Institute. The largest building in Spain, the City of Culture is the former home of the Labor University of Gijón, which was founded in 1955 for the children of miners. The Jovellanos Institute (1797)—once the headquarters of the Royal Institute of Nautical Science and…
- Jovellanos, Gaspar Melchor de (Spanish statesman)
Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos was a Spanish statesman and author, one of the most important figures of the 18th-century Spanish Enlightenment. After studying law, Jovellanos was appointed to judicial posts at Sevilla (1767) and Madrid (1778). He gained fame for his literary and scholarly activities
- Jovem Guarda (Brazilian youth-oriented cultural movement)
Roberto Carlos: …youth-oriented cultural movement known as Jovem Guarda (“Young Guard”), and in 1965 he began cohosting a musical variety TV program by that name. Carlos’s irrepressible popularity—bolstered by a top-selling album, Roberto Carlos canta para a juventude (1965; “Roberto Carlos Sings to the Youth”), and a string of hit songs that…
- Joven, El (Spanish painter)
Francisco Herrera, the Younger was a painter and architect who figured prominently in the development of the Spanish Baroque style in Sevilla (Seville) and Madrid. He was the son and pupil of Francisco Herrera the Elder. After fleeing from his father (who was noted for his bad temper), Herrera the
- Joveynī, ʿAṭā Malek (Persian historian)
ʿAṭā Malek Joveynī was a Persian historian. Joveynī was the first of several brilliant representatives of Persian historiography who flourished during the period of Mongol domination in Iran (1220–1336). Born into a well-known and highly respected family of governors and civil servants, Joveynī
- Joviall Crew, A (work by Brome)
Richard Brome: …popular of his plays, although A Joviall Crew (produced 1641, published 1652) is considered to be his best work. There are 15 of his comedies extant, including The City Wit; or The Woman Wears the Breeches (produced 1629; published 1653), The Sparagus Garden (produced 1635; published 1640), The Antipodes (produced…
- Jovian (Roman emperor)
Jovian was a Roman emperor from 363 to 364. Jovian took part in the expedition of the emperor Julian against Sāsānian Persia. He held the rank of senior staff officer and was proclaimed emperor by his troops after Julian was killed on June 26, 363. To extricate his army from Persia, the new ruler
- Jovian planet (astronomy)
planet: Planets of the solar system: …Jupiter to Neptune are called giant planets or Jovian planets. Between these two main groups is a belt of numerous small bodies called asteroids. After Ceres and other larger asteroids were discovered in the early 19th century, the bodies in this class were also referred to as minor planets or…
- Jovii dynasty (Roman history)
Diocletian: Reorganization of the empire of Diocletian: …After 287 he called himself Jovius (Jove) and Maximian was named Herculius (Hercules), signifying that they had been chosen by the gods and predestined as participants in the divine nature. Thus, they were charged with distributing the benefits of Providence, Diocletian through divine wisdom, and Maximian through heroic energy. Later…
- Jovine, Francesco (Italian author)
Italian literature: Social commitment and the new realism: …“Peasants of the South”]) and Francesco Jovine (Le terre del Sacramento [1950; “The Lands of the Sacrament”; Eng. trans. The Estate in Abruzzi]). Vivid pictures of the Florentine working classes were painted by Vasco Pratolini (Il quartiere [1945; “The District”; Eng. trans. The Naked Streets] and Metello [1955; Eng.
- Jovinus (Roman general)
Valentinian I: His general Jovinus defeated them three times. At Durocatalaunum (modern Châlons-sur-Marne, France), in the third engagement, Jovinus inflicted heavy casualties on the Alemanni, securing Gaul for years to come. Meanwhile, in 367, the emperor moved to Ambiani (modern Amiens, France) to be in closer communication with his…
- Jovius, Paulus (Italian historian)
Paulus Jovius was an Italian historian, author of vivid historical works in Latin, and the owner of a famous art collection. In about 1513 Jovius settled in Rome; he won the favour of Leo X (who compared him to Livy) and of Cardinal Giulio de’ Medici, later Clement VII, whom he helped during the
- jowar (grain)
sorghum, (Sorghum bicolor), cereal grain plant of the grass family (Poaceae) and its edible starchy seeds. The plant likely originated in Africa, where it is a major food crop, and has numerous varieties, including grain sorghums, used for food; grass sorghums, grown for hay and fodder; and
- Jowers, Loyd (American restaurant owner)
assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.: Conspiracy theories: Also in 1993, Loyd Jowers, the owner of a tavern below Brewer’s rooming house, said in a television interview that he had been paid $100,000 to plan King’s assassination by a Memphis merchant with connections to organized crime. He claimed that he had hired King’s killer (not Ray),…
- Jowett, Benjamin (English scholar)
Benjamin Jowett was a British classical scholar, considered to be one of the greatest teachers of the 19th century. He was renowned for his translations of Plato and as an outstanding tutor of great influence who became master of Balliol College, Oxford. Jowett was educated at St. Paul’s School,
- Joy (film by Russell [2015])
Bradley Cooper: …a chef seeking redemption, and Joy, in which he reteamed with Russell and Lawrence.
- joy (emotion)
Christianity: Joy in human existence: Friedrich Nietzsche summarized his critique of the Christians of his time in the words of Zarathushtra (Zoroaster): “They would have to sing better songs to me that I might believe in their Redeemer: his disciples would have to look more redeemed!”…
- Joy Division/New Order (British rock group)
Joy Division/New Order, British rock group who, as Joy Division, refined the external chaos of 1970s punk into a disquieting inner turmoil, ushering in the postpunk era, and later, as New Order, pioneered the successful fusion of rock and 1980s African American dance music styles. The principal
- Joy in Service on Rue Tagore (poetry by Muldoon)
Paul Muldoon: Poetry: Joy in Service on Rue Tagore (2024) garnered praise from critics, with The New York Times singling out Muldoon’s “virtuosic gift for rhyme and his uncanny sense of rhythm” and noting his penchant for “labyrinthine” wordplay and riddles.
- Joy Luck Club, The (novel by Tan)
Amy Tan: The Joy Luck Club: …part of her first novel, The Joy Luck Club (1989). The novel relates the experiences of four Chinese mothers, their Chinese American daughters, and the struggles of the two disparate cultures and generations to relate to each other. “Rules of the Game” was one of the stories interwoven into the…
- Joy Luck Club, The (film by Wang [1993])
Wayne Wang: Career: …major Hollywood studio movie was The Joy Luck Club (1993), which was based on the best-selling novel by American author Amy Tan. The film explores the struggles of four Chinese mothers and their Chinese American daughters to relate to each other, and it was one of the first movies in…
- Joy machine (mining machinery)
coal mining: Mechanized loading: …the prototype stage until the Joy machine was introduced in 1914. Employing the gathering-arm principle, the Joy machine provided the pattern for future successful mobile loaders. After the introduction in 1938 of electric-powered, rubber-tired shuttle cars designed to carry coal from the loading machine to the elevator, mobile loading and…
- Joy of Gay Sex, The (work by White)
Edmund White: Travelogues, memoirs, and other nonfiction works: …include the seminal sex manual The Joy of Gay Sex (1977; with Charles Silverstein). States of Desire: Travels in Gay America (1980) is a travelogue that investigates gay culture in cities across the United States. White paid homage to his adopted city of Paris in Our Paris: Sketches from Memory…
- Joy of Knowledge, The (film by Godard [1968])
Jean-Luc Godard: Breathless and filmmaking style and themes: Le Gai savoir (1968; The Joy of Knowledge) is a flatly illustrated text spoken by two students named Émile Rousseau and Patricia Lumumba. His texts for the next decade exhibited a complete indifference to their appeal to the public and were intended as intellectual agitprop (i.e., agitation-propaganda): in Godard’s…
- Joy of Painting, The (American television show)
ASMR: Triggers of ASMR: The television show The Joy of Painting (1983–94), created by American painter and television personality Bob Ross, is popular among persons who experience ASMR. Ross’s gentle voice, the repetitive movements of his hands, and the sounds of paintbrushes tapping and brushing invoke ASMR. Videos of his painting sessions…
- Joy of the Worm (work by Sargeson)
Frank Sargeson: …sexual adventures of a friend; Joy of the Worm (1969), a comic epistolary novella; the collection Man of England Now (1972), which contained previously published work as well as the novella A Game of Hide and Seek; and Sunset Village (1976), a novella that details the nefarious goings-on at a…
- joy perfume tree (plant)
joy perfume tree, (Magnolia champaca), tree native to tropical Asia that is best known for its pleasant fragrance. The species, which is classified in the magnolia family (Magnoliaceae), is also characterized by its lustrous evergreen elliptical leaves. The tree grows to about 50 metres (164 feet)
- Joy Ripper (mining machinery)
coal mining: Development of continuous mining: The Joy Ripper (1948) was the first continuous miner applicable to the room-and-pillar method.
- Joy, Alfred (United States astronomer)
star cluster: General description and classification: …at Mount Wilson Observatory by Alfred Joy.
- Joy, Bill (American software developer and entrepreneur)
Bill Joy is an American software developer, entrepreneur, and cofounder of the computer manufacturer Sun Microsystems. Joy devised a version of the UNIX operating system, Berkeley UNIX, that used the TCP/IP networking language, which placed UNIX servers at the forefront of the Internet revolution
- Joy, Rick (American architect)
Rick Joy is an American architect based in Tucson, Arizona, known especially for his works in desert settings. Joy studied music at the University of Maine before enrolling as an architecture student at the University of Arizona in 1985. He graduated in 1990 and founded his own firm in 1993. Joy
- Joy, William Nelson (American software developer and entrepreneur)
Bill Joy is an American software developer, entrepreneur, and cofounder of the computer manufacturer Sun Microsystems. Joy devised a version of the UNIX operating system, Berkeley UNIX, that used the TCP/IP networking language, which placed UNIX servers at the forefront of the Internet revolution
- Joya de Cerén Archaeological Site (archaeological site, El Salvador)
El Salvador: Services: …Tazumal, and Quelepa; and the Joya de Cerén Archaeological Site, which was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1993 and consists of the ruins of a prehistoric farming village that was buried by a volcano about 600 ce.
- Joyce, James (Irish author)
James Joyce was an Irish novelist noted for his experimental use of language and exploration of new literary methods in such large works of fiction as Ulysses (1922) and Finnegans Wake (1939). Joyce is regarded as one of the most influential writers of the 20th century. Joyce was the eldest of 10
- Joyce, James Augustine Aloysius (Irish author)
James Joyce was an Irish novelist noted for his experimental use of language and exploration of new literary methods in such large works of fiction as Ulysses (1922) and Finnegans Wake (1939). Joyce is regarded as one of the most influential writers of the 20th century. Joyce was the eldest of 10