Call Number (LC) Title Results
BJ1535.P9 W54 The vanity of childhood and youth : wherein the depraved nature of young people is represented, and means for their reformation proposed : being some sermons ... To which is added, a catechism for youth / 1
BJ1535.P9 W66 1992 The history of vanity / 1
BJ1535.R45 The dialectic of ressentiment : pedagogy of a concept / 2
BJ1535.R45 S3313 1994 Ressentiment / 1
BJ1535.R45 S36 2023 The return of resentment : the rise and decline and rise again of a political emotion / 2
BJ1535.R45 S93 1980 Rancor against time : the phenomenology of 'ressentiment' / 1
BJ1535.R45 T66 2015 Ressentiment : reflections on mimetic desire and society / 1
BJ1535.R45 T667 2015eb Ressentiment : reflections on mimetic desire and society / 1
BJ1535.R5 C37 2021 Uncivil mirth : ridicule in enlightenment Britain / 2
BJ1535.R5 M53 2022 Disparagement humor in social life : competition vs. subjugation / 1
BJ1535.S4 C65 1991 The rise of selfishness in America / 1
BJ1535.S4 ebook El arte de no ser egoísta : una reflexión sobre la moral y los obstáculos para practicarla / 1
BJ1535.S4 S35 2020 Selfishness and selflessness : new approaches to understanding morality / 1
BJ1535.S6 C43 2014 Character assassination throughout the ages / 1
BJ1535.S6 P1 1700 A Bridle for the tongue: or, The trial and condemnation of Whispering-Backbiter. Being a profitable and pleasant discourse, designed as an essay to detect the sin of detraction, an evil too common in this age. 1
BJ1535.S7 D3 Snobissimo : ou, Le désir de paraître. 1
BJ1535.S8 H32 1995 The counterfeit wisdom of shallow minds : a critique of some leading offenders of the 1980s / 1
BJ1535.S9 B7 [Glosso-chalinosis], or, A bridle for the tongue. Wherein Christians are exhorted and directed to a holy and religious vigilancy; as over all their ways, so in special over their words. / 1
BJ1535.S9 .L43 A Letter to a gentleman in the commission of the peace exciting him to the performance of his part in executing the late act against profane cursing and swearing. 2
BJ1535.S9 S7 Phinehas, or, The common duty of all men, and the special duty of magistrates, to be zealous and active in the execution of laws against scandalous sins and debauchery and of that in particular, against prophane cursing and swearing. 1