Example sentences of "in chapter " in BNC.

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1 In chapter 4 , on monographs , there were some comments on the photography of art as a complement to criticism ; there are some other issues about how accurate or misleading photographs can be .
2 Throughout drama school there will be continuous work on acting solo pieces , and both singing and acting tutorials are usually conducted on a one to one basis ( more on tutorials in chapter 7 ) .
3 We aim to show in Chapter 5 that this blindness was in part promoted by the religious elements in their beliefs .
4 As will be seen in Chapter 5 , understanding this religious social consciousness requires some grasp of the traditional catholic teaching on the natural order and the good society , and how the nation is to respect the divine order established by God .
5 As will be seen in Chapter 5 , this interpretation is not without foundation .
6 As seen in Chapter 3 , this was also true in the nineteenth century , despite lower clergy support particularly for the Fenian movement .
7 One can now see how the preliminary data dealt with in Chapter 1 on good and bad religiosity among Roman catholics is indicative of a long-standing historical contradiction .
8 The concept of the majority is an important one in both British and Irish politics as already seen in Chapter 4 .
9 The article as a whole is strangely lopsided but seems to follow on from the logic of this position , embodying the agreement made between clergy and politicians towards the end of the nineteenth century outlined in Chapter 3 .
10 As will be seen in Chapter 7 , this itself could only have been due to current Roman catholic social teaching on mixed marriage .
11 What has been seen as an aspect of the Roman catholic intellectual opposition to divorce in Chapter 5 can also be recognized as a feature of the defence of catholic schools too : the opposition contains an interpretation of the moral nature of contemporary society and of what happens to catholics who are not to some degree protected from it .
12 In Chapter 3 I will describe in detail the culture created to deal with these ‘ street-visible ’ offenders in a cell-block situation , but suggest the inertia surrounding the whole problem is more easily understood when we consider the social history of such illness ( Foucault 1967 ) , and see how the executive has always allocated the control of such ‘ drunken dossers ’ to the police .
13 Systems will simply not change as easily as Shapland and Hobbs seem to hope ; for police society is extremely conservative and masculine in outlook , and has long reflected the low esteem women are given in wider society , as I will describe in more detail in Chapter 4 .
14 I will expand further on this dichotomy between quality and quantity of ‘ crime ’ in Chapter 5 , but would argue that the chase for numerical detections in which detectives everywhere are immersed moves them across another conceptual boundary and takes them into a statistical world away from their previous world as ‘ real polises ’ where the central classifier of conflict with the ‘ prig ’ remains , as ever , in a power struggle over the body ( Foucault 1977 ) .
15 ( The many demonstrations , in neuropsychological experiments of the kind discussed in Chapter 4 , of the loss of mental processes caused by the loss of neural processes are more powerful here . )
16 This seems to have been , at least in part , the motive behind a walking-tour which Pound took in 1911 , of which we learn in chapter 16 of his Guide to Kulchur , written twenty years later :
17 Or so it appears from the valuable memoirs of Mrs Belloc Lowndes , in chapter nine of her Merry Wives of Westminster :
18 In Chapter 4 we recalled the well-established view that the British electorate came to rely more on television than the press from the late 1950s or early 1960s onwards .
19 Our analysis of television news content in Chapter 4 showed that controversy reached a peak on television in the third week of the campaign .
20 For consistency , we use a standard predictive scheme based upon thirty-five predictors representing the influences set out in the general model of media influence described in Chapter 1 .
21 Our content analysis of national television news in Chapter 4 suggests that television news was biased both towards the government of the day ( through extra coverage of the government ) and towards right-wing political viewpoints ( through its emphasis on crime , defence , and security ) .
22 Our comparison of BBC-TV with ITV in Chapter 5 showed that there was little difference between them .
23 Our opinion survey in Chapter 6 showed that most voters felt television news on both networks was unbiased ; but amongst the minority who felt it was biased a majority thought it was biased towards the Conservatives and against both Labour and the Alliance .
24 This was clearly the case in the Central Agricultural Region , which we shall consider in Chapter 2 .
25 The precarious hold of the party over cultural ideology will be examined in greater detail in Chapter 6 .
26 In Chapter 3 the focus will be directed instead on those contacts between the guberniia centres of Saratov and Samara and Moscow which were crucial for the alleviation of the famine conditions .
27 The number of passengers carried was 11.5 million in 1913 , 7 million in 1920 , and 12 million by 1924 : the productivity of river transport rose much faster after 1921 than that of the railways , although many problems had to be overcome , as was seen with regard to the Volga fleet in Chapter 3 .
28 Private journals continued to burgeon , as will be seen in Chapter 6 , but the state press could henceforth stand better on its own feet financially .
29 In chapter xxii of Principles of Literary Criticism Mr. Richards discusses these matters in his own way .
30 As we saw in Chapter 14 , Michel Foucault argues that before the nineteenth century the sodomite was someone who performed a certain kind of act ; no specific identity was attributed to , or assumed by , the sodomite .
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