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- Volume 38, July 17, 2003 - June 17, 2004 (1)
Articles 1 - 30 of 39
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Lanthorn, Vol. 38, No. 14, November 13, 2003, Grand Valley State University
Lanthorn, Vol. 38, No. 14, November 13, 2003, Grand Valley State University
Volume 38, July 17, 2003 - June 17, 2004
Lanthorn is Grand Valley State's student newspaper, published from 1968 to the present.
Political Correctness Today, Joseph Ellin
Political Correctness Today, Joseph Ellin
Center for the Study of Ethics in Society Papers
Paper presented to the Center of the Study of Ethics in Society Western Michigan University, November 14th, 2003.
The Deaf Catholic, November-December 2003
The Deaf Catholic, November-December 2003
ICDA The Deaf Catholic
A newsletter published for Deaf Catholics in USA
ICDA The Deaf CatholicFinding Aid
Re-Inventing Sicily In Italian-American Writing And Film, Fred L. Gardaphé
Re-Inventing Sicily In Italian-American Writing And Film, Fred L. Gardaphé
Publications and Research
No abstract provided.
Painting, Photography And Fidelity In The Tragic Muse, Adam Sonstegard
Painting, Photography And Fidelity In The Tragic Muse, Adam Sonstegard
English Faculty Publications
Photographs can approach the elegance of paintings, but reproductions can show the distortion of photographs - so The Tragic Muse (1890) suggests, complicating critical understandings of James and visual art. Dramatizing artists' fidelity, James resists assuming that families, races, and genders provide similar options. Fidelity in art can mean 'infidelity' in life, lead to 'adulterated' reproductions, and impugn understandings of inherited and performed identities - concerns which resurface in The American Scene (1907) when James contemplates immigrant populations and in A Small Boy and Others (1913) when a family daguerreotype becomes evidence of his own fidelity.
Irish Law 2003: An Insider's Guide To Notre Dame Law School, Notre Dame Law School
Irish Law 2003: An Insider's Guide To Notre Dame Law School, Notre Dame Law School
About the Law School
To the Notre Dame Law School Class of 2006:
Welcome to Notre Dame Law School! We are pleased to be among the first students to welcome you to our community. If you are anything like we were just a few years ago, you probably have plenty of questions about law school, Notre Dame and South Bend. We hope that this guide will give you answers to many of your questions and gives a window into what life at Notre Dame is like.
This is an insider’s guide because it was written entirely by students. A group of volunteers have put …
D'Augustino, Bronx African American History Project
D'Augustino, Bronx African American History Project
Oral Histories
Interviewer: Mark Naison
Interviews took place on September 30, 2003
Summarized by Alice Stryker
This interview is broken into 3 sessions. The first two are with an anonymous woman called “woman 1” and the third session is with an anonymous woman called “woman 2”.
Woman 1, who we later learn is Mrs. Jones, moved to the Bronx in 1947 to Oak Tree Place and Belmont where they were the only black family on the block. She was initially from Georgia, but moved to New York City when she was very young. Her husband was born in Harlem. They went to …
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 79, No. 8, Wku Student Affairs
Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 79, No. 8, Wku Student Affairs
WKU Archives Records
WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news.
- Hoang, Mai. Journalism Gets a $500,000 Donation
- Clark, Ashlee. Kappa Alpha Psi May Return
- Hopkins, Shawntaye. The Psychology Behind Streaking
- Sebastian, Kandace. Injured Students Released – Carlie Heath, Katie Nelsen
- Reed, Lindsey. Students Voice Concerns About Campus Safety – Student Government Association
- Hoang, Mai. Mass Media & Technology Hall Seeks New Name
- Green, Tavia. Winona LaDuke Speaks Tomorrow
- Lamar, Mike. Editorial Cartoon: A Lesson in Economics & Logic – Tuition
- State-proposed Tuition Cap Bad Idea
- Schmitz, Jake. Regarding Latest Transpark News
- Job Good for Luther Hughes – Ombudsman
- Hughey, …
The Bosom Of The Bourgeoisie: Edgeworth's Belinda, Jordana Rosenberg
The Bosom Of The Bourgeoisie: Edgeworth's Belinda, Jordana Rosenberg
English Department Faculty Publication Series
Recent work in eighteenth-century studies has been notoriously preoccupied by what seem to be striking metaphorical resonances between economic and aesthetic 'spheres of practice,' but, as I argue in my paper, it is the confounding of these analogies that may be most salient. Although Edgeworth's Belinda has been frequently read as demystifying aristocratic codes by replacing sharp sociality with good-natured bourgeois instruction, I show that this text imagines the difference between bourgeois and gift economies not as the substitution of humor's instructive mirth for wit's arch conceits, but as a spectacular encounter between the two.
Recent Editions--Summer 2003
Documentary Editing: Journal of the Association for Documentary Editing (1979-2011)
This quarterly bibliography of current documentary editions published on subjects in the fields of American and British history, literature, and culture is generally restricted to scholarly first editions of English language works.
Mellie Dunham: A Remembrance Norway Maine Summer Festival, July 2003, David Sanderson
Mellie Dunham: A Remembrance Norway Maine Summer Festival, July 2003, David Sanderson
Maine History Documents
The story of Mellie Dunham continues to fascinate, even some seventy-five years after the events. The tale of the 72-year-old country fiddler invited to play for Henry Ford, made famous by the media, then hugely successful as a vaudeville performer, seems almost too perfect to be true. But it all happened, and it was Mellie’s own grace and lack of pretense, a genuineness that inspired the public’s affection for him, that was as much as anything else responsible for the events of 1925 and 1926.
This booklet was created to mark Mellie’s 150th birthday, July 29, 2003. We call it …
The Wild And The Sacred, Douglas E. Christie
The Wild And The Sacred, Douglas E. Christie
Theological Studies Faculty Works
Focuses on the meaning of the growing convergence of the sacred and the wild in contemporary spiritual discourse and practice. Inquiry on the role of spiritual discourse and practice play in the effort to respond and preserve wild places; Poetics of sacred place; Reference of sacred.
The Cresset (Vol. Lxvi, No. 5, Trinity), Valparaiso University
The Cresset (Vol. Lxvi, No. 5, Trinity), Valparaiso University
The Cresset (archived issues)
No abstract provided.
Outreach, June 2003
Outreach
A newsletter published for Deaf Catholics in Great Britain and Ireland
Outreach Finding Aid
Willa Cather As Equivocal Icon, Guy J. Reynolds
Willa Cather As Equivocal Icon, Guy J. Reynolds
Department of English: Presentations, Talks, and Seminar Papers
All icons are ultimately equivocal: you can’t think of an icon without thinking about iconoclasm. Iconicity is a function of place. Cather turned the creation of icons, and the sceptical deconstruction of icons, into a form of narrative quest that could animate a whole fiction. After Cather’s death, her coterie, Midwesterners who had come East, were faced with what to make of an iconic heartlands figure who had moved to this re¬gion. Cather’s status as Midwestern icon became, after her death, a subject of struggle among E.K Brown, his widow Peggy Brown, Dorothy Canfield, Edith Lewis, Alfred Knopf, Leon Edel, …
The Beleaguered Widowof West Bilney: Review Of The Remembrances Of Elizabeth Freke. Edited By Raymond A. Anselment. Camden Fifth Series., Aki Chandra Li Beam
The Beleaguered Widowof West Bilney: Review Of The Remembrances Of Elizabeth Freke. Edited By Raymond A. Anselment. Camden Fifth Series., Aki Chandra Li Beam
Documentary Editing: Journal of the Association for Documentary Editing (1979-2011)
The manuscripts of Elizabeth Freke's reminiscences are contained in two commonplace books held by the British Ubrary. The larger "white vellum" volume, which includes the earlier reminiscence, also contains letters, recipes, snatches of poetry and history, a survey of the West Bilney estate, and some inventories. The second "brown wallpaper" volume, begun some ten years after the first, also contains copies of rental agreements, land deeds, and financial transactions. These two manuscripts were donated to the British Ubrary in 1941 by Lady Mary Carbury, a descendant by marriage of Elizabeth Freke. Early in the twentieth century, Carbury published the only …
Swinging Bridge - March 14, 2003, Steve Damerell
Swinging Bridge - March 14, 2003, Steve Damerell
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - February 14, 2003, Steve Damerell
Swinging Bridge - February 14, 2003, Steve Damerell
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Regulating Babylon: Religion And Rebellion In Pre-Revolutionary North Carolina, Sarah E. King '03
Regulating Babylon: Religion And Rebellion In Pre-Revolutionary North Carolina, Sarah E. King '03
Honors Projects, History
Past historians have situated the Regulator conflict in largely economic or social terms. James Whittenburg and others claim that at the time of the Regulation, a new and vast social division was present in backcountry society. The established backcountry settlers-the agrarian, yeoman farmers of Hermon Husbands' ilk-resented their recent displacement by mercantile and political interests. The Regulation, then, simply "crystallized widespread anxiety over the swift economic and political changes taking place in the piedmont." The Regulators used fleeting issues of the moment to rectify their lessening influence in North Carolina. Rachel Klein similarly argues in Unification of a Slave State …
Churches That Multiply, Elmer L. Towns, Douglas Porter
The Watermark: A Journal Of The Arts - Vol. 11 - 2003-2004, University Of Massachusetts Boston
The Watermark: A Journal Of The Arts - Vol. 11 - 2003-2004, University Of Massachusetts Boston
The Watermark: A Journal of the Arts (1993-ongoing)
No abstract provided.
John Mcgahern: From The Local To The Universal, Eamon Maher
John Mcgahern: From The Local To The Universal, Eamon Maher
Books/Chapters
John McGahern has distinguished himself as one of Ireland's finest living novelists and short story writers with such works as The Pornographer, The Barracks, Amongst Women, and the controversial The Dark, which was banned in Ireland. His latest novel, By the Lake, earned him much critical acclaim, and he was one of only four recipients of a 2003 Lannan Literary Award. In this comprehensive guide to the fiction of John McGahern, Eamon Maher argues that in his themes, scenes, scenarios, and characters, which on the surface seem to originate from a limited source--the local--we can …
Shaw And The French: Irreconcilable Differences, Lasting Impact, Julie A. Sparks
Shaw And The French: Irreconcilable Differences, Lasting Impact, Julie A. Sparks
Faculty Publications, English and Comparative Literature
No abstract provided.
Hunting For Everyday History: Introduction, Marjorie L. Mclellan
Hunting For Everyday History: Introduction, Marjorie L. Mclellan
Hunting for Everyday History
This introduction to Hunting for Everyday history outlines how to use the guide, how to use artifacts in the classroom, as well as directing educators and students to other resources.
Hunting For Everyday History: A Field Guide For Teachers, Marjorie L. Mclellan
Hunting For Everyday History: A Field Guide For Teachers, Marjorie L. Mclellan
Hunting for Everyday History
Hunting for Everyday History is a hands-on guide comprised of Ohio history lessons and activities for students in third, fourth, and fifth grade. It was designed by teachers and some of Ohio's leading history experts to give students a chance to think and act like historians and curators.
Et Cetera, Marshall University
Et Cetera, Marshall University
Et Cetera
Founded in 1953, Et Cetera is an annual literary magazine that publishes the creative writing and artwork of Marshall University students and affiliates. Et Cetera is free to the Marshall University community.
Et Cetera welcomes submissions in literary and film criticism, poetry, short stories, drama, all types of creative non-fiction, photography, and art.
The Shanachie Volume 15, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie Volume 15, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie (CTIAHS)
No abstract provided.
The Heritage Arts Imperative, Barre Toelken
The Heritage Arts Imperative, Barre Toelken
English Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Things Are Seldom What They Seem: Judges And Lawyers In The Tales Of Mark Twain, Lucia A. Silecchia
Things Are Seldom What They Seem: Judges And Lawyers In The Tales Of Mark Twain, Lucia A. Silecchia
Scholarly Articles
This article explores the many and varies legal characters that populated the bench and bar in Mark Twain’s work. Judges and lawyers have long captivated the minds and talents of authors, and Twain was a prolific creator of jurisprudential characters. This article’s thesis is that a careful study of Twain’s fiction reveals a disturbing pattern of inconsistency between the conduct of his attorneys and judges and the quality of justice that their actions bring about. In all too many of Twain’s tales, true “justice” is far more likely to be achieved where lawyers and judges violate legal rules through deception, …