A-Z Browse

  • Walcott, Mary Morris Vaux (American artist and naturalist)
    American artist and naturalist who is remembered for her paintings of the wildflowers of North America, particularly as published by the Smithsonian Institution....
  • Walcott, Sir Clyde Leopold (West Indian cricketer)
    West Indian cricketer (b. Jan. 17, 1926, New Orleans, Bridgetown, Barbados—d. Aug. 26, 2006, Bridgetown), was, along with Sir Frank Worrell and Everton Weekes, one of the renowned “Three Ws” who propelled the West Indies to the top tier of international cricket in the 1950s. An attacking right-hand middle-order batsman, Walcott made his first-class debut for Barbados on his 16...
  • Wald, Abraham (American statistician)
    Generalizations of the problem of gambler’s ruin play an important role in statistical sequential analysis, developed by the Hungarian-born American statistician Abraham Wald in response to the demand for more efficient methods of industrial quality control during World War II. They also enter into insurance risk theory, which is discussed in the section Stochastic processes: Insurance risk...
  • Wald, George (American biochemist)
    American biochemist who received (with Haldan K. Hartline of the United States and Ragnar Granit of Sweden) the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1967 for his work on the chemistry of vision....
  • Wald, Lillian D. (American sociologist)
    American nurse and social worker who founded the internationally known Henry Street Settlement in New York City (1893)....
  • Waldalgesheim style (Celtic art)
    ...semiprecious stones and coral. During the Iron Age this style flourished and branched out into different schools of great beauty. The style reached its mature form in the 4th century bc with the Waldalgesheim style, and, after this point, its most interesting branch was found in Britain, which saw a very individual development and where La Tène art continued to flourish aft...
  • Waldburg, Saint (Frankish abbess)
    abbess and missionary who, with her brothers Willibald of Eichstätt and Winebald of Heidenheim, was important in St. Boniface’s organization of the Frankish church....
  • Walddorfschule (education)
    ...Dornach, near Basel, Switz., Steiner built his first Goetheanum, which he characterized as a “school of spiritual science.” After a fire in 1922, it was replaced by another building. The Waldorf School movement, derived from his experiments with the Goetheanum, by 1969 had some 80 schools attended by more than 25,000 children in Europe and the United States. Other projects that ha...
  • Waldeck (former state, Germany)
    a former Kreis (administrative district) and state of Germany, between Westphalia and Hesse-Nassau. For centuries a principality and from November 1918 to March 1929 a republic and constituent state of the Weimar Republic, it was on April 1, 1929, amalgamated with Prussia at the request of its people. It had an area of 420 square miles (1,088 square km), covered with hills containing farml...
  • Waldeck-Rousseau (French warship)
    In his youth Ton Duc Thang was an enthusiastic Communist. He joined the French Navy in 1912; and in 1918–19, while aboard the French warship Waldeck-Rousseau on its way to curb revolutionary activities in Russia, he took part in an unsuccessful plot to turn the battleship over to the Bolshevik revolutionaries. He also instigated strikes against French intervention in revolutionary......
  • Waldeck-Rousseau, Loi (French law)
    ...of the interior in the Cabinet of Léon Gambetta, one of the founders of the Third Republic, and he filled the same post, under Jules Ferry, from 1883 to 1885. In 1884 he sponsored the Loi Waldeck-Rousseau, which made trade unions legal, though with important restrictions. After another term as deputy (1885–89), he retired to make his fortune at the bar. In 1894, however, he......
  • Waldeck-Rousseau, Pierre-Marie-René (French politician)
    politician who, as premier of France, settled the Dreyfus Affair. He was also responsible for the legalization of trade unions in France (1884)....
  • Waldeck-Rousseau, René (French politician)
    politician who, as premier of France, settled the Dreyfus Affair. He was also responsible for the legalization of trade unions in France (1884)....
  • Waldemar I (Danish king)
    ...(distinguished by burial tumuli). The Germanic Rugieri tribe was displaced about 500 bc by the Slavic Wends, whose fortress on the northern promontory of Arkona was destroyed by the Danish king Waldemar I when he conquered and Christianized the island in 1168. Rügen thereafter was ruled by native princes under Danish supremacy until 1218 and passed to Pomerania (Pomorze) in...
  • Walden, Herwarth (German publisher and art director)
    (German: “The Assault”), a periodical and later a gallery—both established by Herwarth Walden in the early 20th century in Berlin—devoted to the newest trends in art. The first issue of Der Sturm, published in 1910 as a weekly for literature and criticism, contained drawings by Oskar Kokoschka; the following year, the works of Die Brücke artists were......
  • Walden inversion (chemical reaction)
    in chemistry, the spatial rearrangement of atoms or groups of atoms in a dissymmetric molecule, giving rise to a product with a molecular configuration that is a mirror image of that of the original molecule....
  • Walden; or, Life in the Woods (work by Thoreau)
    Out of such activity and thought came Walden, a series of 18 essays describing Thoreau’s experiment in basic living and his effort to set his time free for leisure. Several of the essays provide his original perspective on the meaning of work and leisure and describe his experiment in living as simply and self-sufficiently as possible, while in others Thoreau descri...
  • Walden, Paul (Latvian chemist)
    chemist who discovered the Walden inversion, a reversal of stereochemical configuration that occurs in many reactions of covalent compounds....
  • Walden Pond (pond, Massachusetts, United States)
    small pond (about 64 acres [26 hectares]) in Concord town (township), Middlesex county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies just south of the village of Concord in Walden Pond State Reservation (304 acres [123 hectares]). The pond was immortalized by Henry David Thoreau, who retreated there (1845–47) from society prior to writing ...
  • Walden, Thomas Howard, Lord Howard of (English commander)
    an English commander during the attack of the Spanish Armada and in other forays against the Spanish during the reign of Elizabeth I. He was also a councillor in the reign of James I....
  • Walden Two (novel by Skinner)
    ...mechanical, air-conditioned box designed to provide an optimal environment for child growth during the first two years of life. In 1948 he published one of his most controversial works, Walden Two, a novel on life in a utopian community modeled on his own principles of social engineering....
  • Waldenburg (Poland)
    city, Dolnośląskie województwo (province), southwestern Poland, in the central Sudeten (Sudety) mountains. The second largest town in Lower Silesia (after Wrocław), it is an important rail junction....
  • Waldenses (religious movement)
    members of a Christian movement that originated in 12th-century France, the devotees of which sought to follow Christ in poverty and simplicity. In modern times the name has been applied to members of a Protestant church (centred on the Franco-Italian border) that formed when remnants of the earlier movement became Swiss Protestant Reformers....
  • Waldensian movement (religious movement)
    members of a Christian movement that originated in 12th-century France, the devotees of which sought to follow Christ in poverty and simplicity. In modern times the name has been applied to members of a Protestant church (centred on the Franco-Italian border) that formed when remnants of the earlier movement became Swiss Protestant Reformers....
  • Waldersee, Alfred von (German general)
    ...that Germany should stay at first on the defensive in the west and deal a crippling blow to Russia’s advanced forces before turning to counterattack the French advance. His immediate successor, Alfred von Waldersee, also believed in staying on the defensive in the west. Alfred, Graf von Schlieffen, who served as chief of the German general staff from 1891 to 1905, took a contrary view, a...
  • Waldglas (glass)
    ...a continuous survival, probably from late Roman times, of a local type of green glass, a product of forest glasshouses made with potash obtained by burning forest vegetation and called therefore Waldglas (“forest glass”). From this material, often of great beauty of colour, were made shapes peculiar to Germany, notably a cylindrical beer glass studded with projecting bosses, or......
  • Waldheim, Kurt (president of Austria)
    Austrian diplomat and statesman who served two terms as the fourth secretary-general of the United Nations (UN), from 1972 to 1981. He was the elected president of Austria from 1986 to 1992....
  • Waldheim, Kurt Josef (president of Austria)
    Austrian diplomat and statesman who served two terms as the fourth secretary-general of the United Nations (UN), from 1972 to 1981. He was the elected president of Austria from 1986 to 1992....
  • waldhorn (musical instrument)
    the orchestral and military brass instrument derived from the trompe (or cor) de chasse, a large, circular hunting horn that appeared in France about 1650 and soon began to be used orchestrally. Use of the term French horn dates at least from the 17th century. Valves were added to the instrument in the early 19th century. Modern Fre...
  • Waldivus Ingeniator (engineer)
    ...Caesar referred to his praefectus fabrum, an official who controlled the labour gangs employed on road making and also parties of artisans. The Domesday survey of ad 1086 included one “Waldivus Ingeniator,” who held nine manors direct from the crown and was probably William the Conqueror’s chief engineer in England. Throughout the Middle Ages, ecclesias...
  • “Waldmädchen, Das” (work by Weber)
    ...lithographic works in order to propagate the young composer’s music. The scheme fell through; but meanwhile Weber had composed his first opera, Das Waldmädchen (“The Forest Maiden”), which partially survives. Staged at Freiberg in 1800, it was a failure. On a return visit to Salzburg, Weber completed his first wholly surviving opera, ......
  • Waldmann, Hans (Swiss leader)
    Swiss leader who was for a time the burgomaster and virtual dictator of Zürich. He supplied mercenaries for half the countries of Europe, making himself one of the richest and most powerful men in the Swiss Confederation....
  • waldmeister (plant)
    Northern bedstraw (G. boreale), marsh bedstraw (G. palustre), and goosegrass (G. aparine) are common throughout Europe and have become naturalized in parts of North America. Sweet woodruff (G. odoratum, formerly Asperula odorata), or waldmeister, has an odour similar to that of freshly mown hay; its dried shoots are used in perfumes and sachets and for......
  • Waldo (county, Maine, United States)
    county, south-central Maine, U.S. It comprises a coastal region bounded to the east by the Penobscot River and Bay and includes several islands in the Atlantic Ocean, notably Isleboro Island. Other waterways are the Sebasticook, Passagassawakeag, and St. George rivers and Unity and Sheepscot ponds. Spruce and fir are the major forest types. Parklands include L...
  • Waldo, E. Hunter (American author)
    American science-fiction writer who emphasized romantic and sexual themes in his stories....
  • Waldo, Edward Hamilton (American author)
    American science-fiction writer who emphasized romantic and sexual themes in his stories....
  • Waldo, Peter (French religious leader)
    The merchant Valdes (Peter Waldo), who gave up his property and family in the 1170s, took it upon himself to preach in the vernacular to his fellow townsfolk of Lyon. Although he gained the pope’s approval for his lifestyle, Valdes did not receive the right to preach. Nonetheless, he and his followers—“the Poor” or “Poor Men”—continued to do so and ...
  • Waldorf Declaration (American film history)
    ...up to a year in prison for refusing to testify. That evening the members of the Association of Motion Picture Producers, which included the leading studio heads, published what became known as the Waldorf Declaration, in which they fired the members of the Hollywood Ten and expressed their support of HUAC. The studios, afraid to antagonize already shrinking audiences, then initiated an......
  • Waldorf salad (food)
    ...as desserts. Fruits may be added to green salads; avocado, orange, and grapefruit are suitable accompaniments to fatty meats such as duck or pork. Named for the Waldorf Hotel in New York City, the Waldorf salad is made of apples, walnuts, and celery in mayonnaise. Gelatins are often used in various fruit or vegetable salads....
  • Waldorf school (education)
    ...Dornach, near Basel, Switz., Steiner built his first Goetheanum, which he characterized as a “school of spiritual science.” After a fire in 1922, it was replaced by another building. The Waldorf School movement, derived from his experiments with the Goetheanum, by 1969 had some 80 schools attended by more than 25,000 children in Europe and the United States. Other projects that ha...
  • Waldron, Francis Xavier, Jr. (American politician)
    American Communist Party leader and labour organizer. He was general secretary of the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA) from 1945 to 1957 and national chairman during 1959–61....
  • Waldron, Mal (American musician)
    American jazz musician (b. Aug. 16, 1925, New York, N.Y.—d. Dec. 2, 2002, Brussels, Belg.), played piano in a rhythmically intense style that focused tightly on subtle thematic development, using spare, blues-oriented harmonies and ingeniously spaced phrases. He accompanied John Coltrane, Gene Ammons, Jackie McLean, and other stars on many recordings and played in important Billie Holiday, ...
  • Waldron, Malcolm Earl (American musician)
    American jazz musician (b. Aug. 16, 1925, New York, N.Y.—d. Dec. 2, 2002, Brussels, Belg.), played piano in a rhythmically intense style that focused tightly on subtle thematic development, using spare, blues-oriented harmonies and ingeniously spaced phrases. He accompanied John Coltrane, Gene Ammons, Jackie McLean, and other stars on many recordings and played in important Billie Holiday, ...
  • Waldseemüller, Martin (German cartographer)
    German cartographer who in 1507 published the first map with the name America for the New World....
  • Waldstein, Albrecht Wenzel Eusebius von (Bohemian military commander)
    Bohemian soldier and statesman, commanding general of the armies of the Holy Roman emperor Ferdinand II during the Thirty Years’ War. His alienation from the Emperor and his political-military conspiracies led to his assassination....
  • Waldstein, Charles (British archaeologist)
    After the efforts of the English archaeologist Charles Waldstein to internationalize the excavations at Herculaneum (1904) by collecting contributions for this purpose from various nations in Europe and America, the work was finally resumed in May 1927 with Italian state funds and with the object of conducting the excavations with the same continuity as those of Pompeii. The results of this......
  • Waldstein, Ferdinand von (German noble)
    ...congenial than his own. Through Mme von Breuning, Beethoven acquired a number of wealthy pupils. His most useful social contact came in 1788 with the arrival in Bonn of Ferdinand, Graf (count) von Waldstein, a member of the highest Viennese aristocracy and a music lover. Waldstein became a member of the Breuning circle, where he heard Beethoven play and at once became his devoted admirer. At a....
  • Waldstein Sonata (work by Beethoven)
    ...the ideals of the ensuing era of Romanticism. Already in the mature works of Beethoven, there is the beginnings of a breaking-down of the classic modulatory scheme; the opening movement of the Waldstein Sonata, Opus 53 (completed, 1804), for example, is built on a modulation from the tonic, C major, to the sharply contrasting key of E major, instead of the expected key of G. Much of......
  • Waldsteinia (plant genus)
    Some genera and species in Rosaceae frequently grow on more than one continent, but there are discontinuities in their ranges. For instance, Waldsteinia fragarioides (barren strawberry) occurs in areas that are widely separated geographically: eastern North America, western North America, southeastern Europe, and East Asia. Physocarpus (ninebark) follows the same pattern, except......
  • Waldteufel, Charles Emil (French composer)
    French (Alsatian) pianist and one of the best-known waltz composers of his time....
  • Waldteufel, Emil (French composer)
    French (Alsatian) pianist and one of the best-known waltz composers of his time....
  • Waldviertel (region, Austria)
    The Waldviertel (“Forest District”) in the northwest, with deeply incised rivers, is part of the granite plateau called the Mühlviertel (“Mühl District”) and extends southward to cross the Danube. The Weinviertel (“Wine District”) in the northeast is low, hilly country with extensive loess soil cover and a favourable climate. The Vienna Basin...
  • wale (knitting)
    ...basic types of knits are the weft, or filling knits—including plain, rib, purl, pattern, and double knits—and the warp knits—including tricot, raschel, and milanese. In knitting, a wale is a column of loops running lengthwise, corresponding to the warp of woven fabric; a course is a crosswise row of loops, corresponding to the filling....
  • Wales (constituent unit, United Kingdom)
    constituent unit of the United Kingdom that forms a westward extension of the island of Great Britain. The capital and main commercial and financial centre is Cardiff....
  • Wales (work by Edwards)
    ...regions, manners, history, and character, or comparisons of Welsh life and life abroad, such as O’r Bala i Geneva (1889; “From Bala to Geneva”). His major work in English was Wales (1901). Edwards also published inexpensive reprints of Welsh classics. As chief inspector of Welsh education (1907–20), he tirelessly worked to secure the study of Welsh cult...
  • Wales, Alexandra, Princess of (queen consort of Great Britain)
    queen consort of King Edward VII of Great Britain....
  • Wales, Charles, prince of (British prince)
    heir apparent to the British throne, eldest child of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, duke of Edinburgh....
  • Wales, Church in (Anglicanism)
    independent Anglican church in Wales that changed from the Roman Catholic faith during the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century. At the time of the Reformation, the Welsh church was directly controlled by the English church and was thus separated from Rome when Henry VIII declared himself the head of the Church of England (1534)....
  • Wales, Diana, princess of (British princess)
    former consort (1981–96) of Charles, prince of Wales, and mother of the heir second in line to the British throne, Prince William of Wales (born 1982)....
  • Wales, flag of (flag of a constituent unit of the United Kingdom)
    ...
  • Wales, history of
    Wales before the Norman Conquest...
  • Wales, Jimmy (American entrepreneur)
    American entrepreneur, who cofounded Wikipedia, a free Internet-based encyclopaedia operating under an open-source management style....
  • Wales, Jimmy Donal (American entrepreneur)
    American entrepreneur, who cofounded Wikipedia, a free Internet-based encyclopaedia operating under an open-source management style....
  • Wales, Party of (political party, Wales)
    political party that has sought self-government for Wales and worked for the protection and promotion of Welsh language, culture, and traditions....
  • Wales, prince of (royal title)
    title reserved exclusively for the heir apparent to the British throne. It dates from 1301, when King Edward I, after his conquest of Wales and execution (1283) of David III, the last native prince of Wales, gave the title to his son, the future Edward II. Since that time most, but not all, of the eldest sons of English sovereigns have been given the title. It is specifically gr...
  • Wales, Statute of (England [1284])
    ...the conquered districts as shires and hundreds. When English rule provoked rebellion, he methodically reconquered the principality, killing both Llywelyn (1282) and his brother David (1283). By the Statute of Wales (1284) he completed the reorganization of the principality on English lines, leaving the Welsh marchers unaffected. A further Welsh rising in 1294–95 was ruthlessly crushed,.....
  • Wales, University of (university, Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom)
    ...and one-fifth of those in secondary school receive all their instruction in Welsh. The demand for Welsh-language schooling has grown rapidly, particularly in Anglicized parts of South Wales. The University of Wales was formed in 1893 by uniting three constituent institutions at Aberystwyth (1872), Cardiff (1883), and Bangor (1884); it later expanded by adding Swansea (1920), the College of......
  • Wałęsa, Lech (president of Poland)
    labour activist who helped form and led (1980–90) communist Poland’s first independent trade union, Solidarity. The charismatic leader of millions of Polish workers, he went on to become the president of Poland (1990–95). He received the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1983....
  • Walese (people)
    ...with the Mangbetu in the northwest. The Efe have the broadest distribution, extending across the northern and eastern portions of the Ituri, and are associated with the Sudanic-speaking Mamvu and Lese (Walese). The Mbuti live with the Bila (Babila) in the centre of the forest....
  • Walewska, Maria (Polish countess)
    Polish countess and mistress of Napoleon Bonaparte, whom she met in Poland (1806) and followed to Paris and finally Elba....
  • Walewski, Alexandre-Florian-Joseph Colonna, Comte (French statesman and minister)
    French statesman and minister of foreign affairs under Louis-Napoléon (Napoleon III). He was the illegitimate son of Napoleon I and Maria, Countess Walewska....
  • Waley, Arthur David (British translator)
    English sinologist whose outstanding translations of Chinese and Japanese literary classics into English had a profound effect on such modern poets as W.B. Yeats and Ezra Pound. (The family name was changed from Schloss to Waley, his mother’s maiden name, at the outset of World War I.)...
  • Walgreen, Charles R. (American pharmacologist)
    American pharmacist and businessman, known as the father of the modern drugstore. He created the largest retail drugstore chain in the United States....
  • Walgreen, Charles Rudolph (American pharmacologist)
    American pharmacist and businessman, known as the father of the modern drugstore. He created the largest retail drugstore chain in the United States....
  • Walgreen Company (American company)
    ...his return to the United States, he again worked in Chicago as a pharmacist. He bought his first store in 1902 and established C.R. Walgreen & Company in 1909. In 1916 the name was changed to Walgreen Company. By the time of Walgreen’s death, more than 490 stores were operated by the company....
  • walī (Islam)
    A mystic may also be known as walī. By derivation the word walī (“saint”) means “one in close relation; friend.” The awlīyāʾ (plural of walī) are “friends of God who have no fear nor are they sad.” Later the term walī came to denote the Muslim mystics who had reached a cert...
  • Walī al-Dīn ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad ibn Abī Bakr Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan Ibn Khaldūn (Muslim historian)
    the greatest Arab historian, who developed one of the earliest nonreligious philosophies of history, contained in his masterpiece, the Muqaddimah (“Introduction”). He also wrote a definitive history of Muslim North Africa....
  • Walī Allāh, Shāh (Indian Muslim theologian)
    Indian theologian and founder of modern Islamic thought who first attempted to reassess Islamic theology in the light of modern changes....
  • Walī Aurangābādí (Indian Muslim poet)
    ...Aurangābād became the centre of Urdu literary activities. There was much movement of the literati and the elite between Delhi and Aurangābād, and it needed only the genius of Walī Aurangābādí, in the early 18th century, to bridge the linguistic gap between Delhi and the Deccan and to persuade the poets of Delhi to take writing in Urdu seri...
  • Walī Ullāh, Shāh (Indian Muslim theologian)
    Indian theologian and founder of modern Islamic thought who first attempted to reassess Islamic theology in the light of modern changes....
  • walia ibex (mammal)
    ...or Asiatic, ibex (C. i. sibirica), which is larger and has longer horns, and the nubian ibex (C. i. nubiana), which is smaller and has long, slender horns. Other ibexes include the Abyssinian, or walia, ibex (C. i. walie, or C. walie, depending on the authority) and the Pyrenean, or Spanish, ibex (C. pyrenaica). For the Nilgiri ibex (Hemitragus......
  • Wālibah ibn al-Ḥubāb (Islamic author)
    Abū Nuwās, of mixed Arab and Persian heritage, studied in Basra and al-Kūfah, first under the poet Wālibah ibn al-Ḥubāb, later under Khalaf al-Aḥmar. He also studied the Qurʾān (Islāmic sacred scripture), Ḥadīth (traditions relating to the life and utterances of the Prophet), and grammar and is said to have spent a...
  • Walīd, al- (Umayyad caliph)
    sixth caliph (reigned 705–715) of the Umayyad Arab dynasty, who is best known for the mosques constructed during his reign....
  • Walīd I, al- (Umayyad caliph)
    sixth caliph (reigned 705–715) of the Umayyad Arab dynasty, who is best known for the mosques constructed during his reign....
  • Walīd ibn Yazīd, al- (Umayyad caliph)
    caliph (reigned 743–744) of the Umayyad dynasty....
  • Walīd II, al- (Umayyad caliph)
    caliph (reigned 743–744) of the Umayyad dynasty....
  • Walīla (ancient city, Morocco)
    North African archaeological site, located near Fès in the Jebel Zerhoun Plain of Morocco. Under the Mauretanian king Juba II in the 1st century bc and the 1st century ad, Volubilis became a flourishing centre of late Hellenistic culture. Annexed to Rome about ad 44, it was made a municipium (...
  • Walīlī (ancient city, Morocco)
    North African archaeological site, located near Fès in the Jebel Zerhoun Plain of Morocco. Under the Mauretanian king Juba II in the 1st century bc and the 1st century ad, Volubilis became a flourishing centre of late Hellenistic culture. Annexed to Rome about ad 44, it was made a municipium (...
  • walk (athletics)
    This event, also called race walking, is relatively minor. Aside from the Olympic and other multinational competitions, it is seldom a part of track meets. Olympic competition is over 20,000 and 50,000 metres, while other distances are used in individual competitions....
  • walk (baseball)
    The 2001 season was a landmark for Henderson. On April 25, while a member of the San Diego Padres, he broke Babe Ruth’s lifetime record for bases on balls (walks). When Ruth retired from baseball in 1935, he had 2,062 bases on balls, a testament to his ability to judge pitches and intimidate pitchers, and it was thought that the record would never be broken. Ted Williams (with 2,019) had be...
  • walk (animal locomotion)
    in horsemanship, moderately slow four-beat gait of a horse, during which each foot strikes the ground separately and the horse is supported by two or three feet at all times....
  • Walk Across Africa, A (work by Grant)
    ...the 2 12-year journey, Grant had kept a journal describing events of geographic significance and the customs of native peoples; it was published under the title A Walk Across Africa (1864). In 1868 Grant served in the intelligence department under Lord Napier during the Ethiopian campaign, retiring from the service that same year with the rank of......
  • Walk in the Night, A (work by La Guma)
    His first novel, A Walk in the Night, presents the struggle against oppression by a group of characters in Cape Town’s toughest district and, in particular, the moral dissolution of a young man who is unjustly fired from his job. Its general theme of protest is reiterated in And a Threefold Cord (1964), which depicts the degrading effect of apartheid upon a ghetto family, and ...
  • Walk on the Water, A (work by Stoppard)
    His first play, A Walk on the Water (1960), was televised in 1963; the stage version, with some additions and the new title Enter a Free Man, reached London in 1968. His play Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1964–65) was performed at the Edinburgh Festival in 1966. That same year his only novel, Lord Malquist & Mr. Moon, was published. His play...
  • Walk on the Wild Side, A (novel by Algren)
    ...1956), which won the first National Book Award for fiction. Its hero is Frankie Machine, whose golden arm as a poker dealer is threatened by shakiness connected with his drug addiction. In A Walk on the Wild Side (1956; filmed 1962) Algren returned to the 1930s in a picaresque novel of New Orleans bohemian life. After 1959 he abandoned the writing of novels (though he continued......
  • Walk the Line (film by Mangold [2005])
    Other Nominees...
  • Walk This Way (song by Aerosmith)
    ...1980s. In 1986, two years after the return of Perry (who had left the band in 1979), Aerosmith returned to the limelight when Run-D.M.C. made a rap version of the band’s 1975 hit Walk This Way. Converted to sobriety, Aerosmith produced the multiplatinum-selling albums Permanent Vacation (1987) and Pump (...
  • Walk to Paradise Garden, The (photograph by Smith)
    ...in 1945. During the next two years he underwent 32 operations. In 1947, toward the end of his painful convalescence, he took his first photograph since his injury. Entitled The Walk to Paradise Garden, this view of his own children entering a forest clearing became one of his most famous photographs. It concluded the landmark photographic exhibition “The......
  • Walk—Don’t Run (song by the Ventures)
    ...recording material. Formed in the Seattle, Washington, area in 1958, the Ventures established their own label to market their recordings, and their efforts paid off in 1960 when the single “Walk—Don’t Run” became a hit. In 1964 the song was reworked with a more distinct “surf” sound and again was a success. Although the Ventures became identified as a ...
  • Walken, Christopher (American actor)
    Other Nominees...

Link to this article and share the full text with the readers of your Web site or blog-post.

If you think a reference to this article on "" will enhance your Web site, blog-post, or any other web-content, then feel free to link to this article, and your readers will gain full access to the full article, even if they do not subscribe to our service.

You may want to use the HTML code fragment provided below.

copy link

We welcome your comments. Any revisions or updates suggested for this article will be reviewed by our editorial staff. Contact us here.

Regular users of Britannica may notice that this comments feature is less robust than in the past. This is only temporary, while we make the transition to a dramatically new and richer site. The functionality of the system will be restored soon.

A-Z Browse

Image preview