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...best classes I have had at Harvard is Professor of Germanic Philology Eckehard Simon's Literature and Arts C-43, "The Medieval Court." Rather than concentrate solely on the content of the literature itself, we studied the court and politics, knighthood and the rise of chivalry, castles and feudal society. The specific literature of the time was merely a stepping stone, or window, into a broader study of society during the eleventh and twelfth century medieval courts of Europe and its position within the whole of European history. This is only one example of a pattern which I have found...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Senior Reflects On Core Classes | 10/3/1994 | See Source »

...Democratic Party, which ruled Japan for 37 years until displaced by Hosokawa's government, lost two of its last 10 Prime Ministers to scandal. In fact, some analysts think Hosokawa, because of his popularity, could have beaten back the attempts to unseat him. But this supremely independent descendant of feudal lords does as he pleases. He reportedly told his eel-and-sake companions that he wanted more freedom to move around. Some Japanese thought him irresponsible for leaving so abruptly. "He's stepping down in the middle of things," said Tamotsu Dendo, 41, a piano tuner. But others praised Hosokawa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Scandal Finally Outran the Reformer | 4/18/1994 | See Source »

...firm assumption in American policy that reformers will finally win in Russia," says Henryk Szlajfer of the Polish Institute of International Affairs in Warsaw. "All that is nonsense." Says Jaromir Novotny, chief of foreign relations at the Czech Defense Ministry: "Yeltsin is not a democrat. He is a Russian feudal lord." Angry about NATO intransigence over the membership issue, Polish President Lech Walesa has accused the West of "indecision and selfishness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Clinton's Obstacle Course | 1/17/1994 | See Source »

While perhaps 200 million coastal dwellers are now prosperous, and tens of millions of township and village enterprises are thriving, 90 million hamlet dwellers in the interior are still stuck in subsistence farming and near feudal conditions. "Beijing has no extra money to spend on us," says an official in northern Shanxi province. "We were told we would be helped after the reforms took off in the south." Much of the north is still waiting. A businessman from Gansu province, where a quarter of the population is illiterate, complains, "We will always be 10 years behind Shenzhen." At least...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Watch Out for China | 11/29/1993 | See Source »

During the 30-day election campaign, both major candidates doled out lavish promises to potential supporters. Bhutto offered a new joint parnership between the government and business and paid lip service to Qureshi's reforms, but she pandered to feudal landowners with promises of new price supports for agricultural commodities. She also pitched heavily for the support of women. Nawaz Sharif stood on his record of having launched privatization and several grandiose development projects, which have left the country nearly bankrupt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Second Time Lucky? | 10/18/1993 | See Source »

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