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Examples
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Donovan, Arthur, ed. The Chemical Revolution, Essays in Reinterpretation.
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Divorced Beheaded Survived: A Feminist Reinterpretation of the Six Wives of Henry VIII (decent – maybe three stars – not in depth – or feminist – enough)
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Reinterpretation will be painfully messy because it demands excising tribal tradition from the practice of Islam.
E Pluribis Islam? 2009
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Reinterpretation of Reigitherium bunodontum as a Reigitheriidae dryolestoid and the interrelationships of the South American dryolestoids.
Archive 2006-05-01 Darren Naish 2006
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On the background and early history of negligence law, see also Robert L. Rabin, “The Historical Development of the Fault Principle: A Reinterpretation,” 15 Ga.
A History of American Law Lawrence M. Friedman 1985
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On the background and early history of negligence law, see also Robert L. Rabin, “The Historical Development of the Fault Principle: A Reinterpretation,” 15 Ga.
A History of American Law Lawrence M. Friedman 1985
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On the background and early history of negligence law, see also Robert L. Rabin, “The Historical Development of the Fault Principle: A Reinterpretation,” 15 Ga.
A History of American Law Lawrence M. Friedman 1985
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"Since Tanaka's time the machine has grown bigger than its operators," writes Patrick Smith in "Japan: A Reinterpretation."
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Whether one calls the relationship "unquestionably, profoundly sexual," like the poet's best-known modern biographer, Stephen Gill (William Wordsworth: A Life); "strange" and "unhealthy," like Hunter Davies (William Wordsworth: A Biography); or clearly "incestuous," like F.W. Bateson (Wordsworth: A Reinterpretation), is a matter of opinion.
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Whether one calls the relationship "unquestionably, profoundly sexual," like the poet's best-known modern biographer, Stephen Gill (William Wordsworth: A Life); "strange" and "unhealthy," like Hunter Davies (William Wordsworth: A Biography); or clearly "incestuous," like F.W. Bateson (Wordsworth: A Reinterpretation), is a matter of opinion.
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