Charles Burroughs (academic)

Charles Burroughs is the Interim Chair and Elsie B. Smith Professor of Liberal Arts in the Department of Classics at the Case Western Reserve University. He is an art historian specialising in late- and post-medieval Europe. He is an alumnus of Balliol College, Oxford University and the Warburg Institute, University of London and was previously Professor of Art History, Director of CEMERS at Binghamton University.[1][2]

Selected publications

  • Burroughs, C. (1990). From signs to design: Environmental process and reform in early Renaissance Rome, Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.[3][4]
gollark: It lets you specify extra parsing post-processing stuff in cases where you need moar types.
gollark: With serde in Rust and the toml library you can basically just shove a few attributes on a struct, and have a data structure parser.
gollark: Not *as* much.
gollark: I guess you could use dhall too, that actually could be neat.
gollark: Personally, I prefer the general thing of "having types" to "basically being strings".

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-05-18. Retrieved 2011-10-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Case Western Reserve University: Charles Burroughs (Accessed Oct 2011)
  2. http://www2.binghamton.edu/cemers/about.html Binghamton University: CEMERS (Accessed Oct 2011)
  3. Mack, C. R. (1993). Review of Burroughs, C. From Signs to Design: Environmental Process and Reform in Early Renaissance Rome. The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 52, 1, 99-101.
  4. Coffin, D. R. (1992). Review of Burroughs, C. From Signs to Design: Environmental Process and Reform in Early Renaissance Rome. Renaissance Quarterly, 45, 1, 157-160.
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