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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Haiku And Human Anatomy: Investigating Students' Experience With Creative Writing To Learn Structure And Function In An Undergraduate Biology Course, Alexandra M. Ryan
Haiku And Human Anatomy: Investigating Students' Experience With Creative Writing To Learn Structure And Function In An Undergraduate Biology Course, Alexandra M. Ryan
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Biology education research has identified needs and new approaches that have informed several reform movements to enrich learning, prepare students to be biologically literate citizens, and give them the skills to pursue a career in science if they choose. The Vision and Change report published in 2011 identified a need for change in undergraduate biology education due to the fast paced nature of the field of biology and outdated traditional methods of biology education that cannot keep up with societal needs. The Vision and Change report outlines five core concepts and competencies that educators should include in their undergraduate biology …
Phantasmagorya: An Experiment In Monstrous Poetics, Christopher W. Gardner
Phantasmagorya: An Experiment In Monstrous Poetics, Christopher W. Gardner
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
A Warning Reader Beware: Here be Monsters! The following pages contain (or attempt to contain) ghouls, ghosts, cryptids, monsters of myth and movie, and paranormal and supernatural happenings of all kinds. They also contain some psychological monsters as well. Proceed, then, at your own risk. If you, like me, have learned to love the things that go bump in the night, and to see in their grotesqueries something pure and beautiful, then the following explanation will be redundant to you. If, however, you’re still afraid, let me be your guide. Nothing here can hurt you any more than you are …
For The Women Who Wear Pi Day Shirts, Jacqui Weaver
For The Women Who Wear Pi Day Shirts, Jacqui Weaver
Honors College
This project, entitled To The Women Who Wear Pi Day Shirts, is a poetry manuscript that explores a journey of a women in STEM. While taking college English courses, I read about characters such as the creature in Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, who had intelligence, yet was physically hideous, an outsider from the human population. The creature was an outsider to the normal human, much like how I feel as a woman in STEM, which gave me the idea to write about my own journey. The poetry in this manuscript is a reflection from being in elementary school learning mathematics …
The Wall Occupies A Space Too, Ashley Paul
The Wall Occupies A Space Too, Ashley Paul
Honors College
This project, entitled the wall occupies a space too, is a creative exploration of the self and the surrounding world. Poetry has been a way for me to explore my thoughts and feelings in order to better understand myself, and to share my perspective and experiences with others. Moreover, it has been a way for me to express my feelings and momentarily free myself from the chains of society by recognizing and cultivating my relationship with the natural world. Much like Anne Sexton’s and Sylvia Plath’s work, because of this focus on the self and in revealing and admitting personal …
Choking Hazards, Tessa Hathaway
Choking Hazards, Tessa Hathaway
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
The following manuscript is a creative writing thesis in poetry. The goal of the thesis was to expand my abilities as a poet and find a cohesion in my work. I wanted to utilize some skills gain in a fiction workshop and apply them to poetry, as well as gain influences in various fields of expertise through the other courses I’ve been taking in the English department. Essays for a poetics class, novels for an American literature class, and short stories for a fiction workshop gave me a base from which to work from and draw inspiration. Not only was …
The New Writing Series, Spring 2016, The University Of Maine Honors College
The New Writing Series, Spring 2016, The University Of Maine Honors College
Cultural Affairs Distinguished Lecture Series
In its thirty-fourth consecutive semester of programming, the New Writing Series will host six readings featuring four poets (John Keene, Prageeta Sharma, Divya Victor, and John Yau) and two fiction writers (Emily Fridlund and Joanna Walsh).
These writers are all highly active across the full spectrum of literary activity. They are editors, publishers, and anthologists; translators and tale-tellers; art-makers and trail-blazing scholars.
The New Writing Series brings innovative and adventurous contemporary writing to the University of Maine's flagship campus in Orono on selected Thursdays at 4:30pm.
"Poetry In Translation", The University Of Maine School Of Performing Arts
"Poetry In Translation", The University Of Maine School Of Performing Arts
Cultural Affairs Distinguished Lecture Series
"Poetry in Translation," is a public lecture by Dr. John Burns. The lecture is scheduled for Wednesday, September 16th, 2015 at 4pm in Hill Auditorium. Dr. Burns will also meet with classes in the English Department and the Department of Modern Languages and will narrate "The Cloths of Heaven," a Faculty Series Concert of song settings of W.B. Yeats' poetry on Friday, September 18th in Minsky Hall.
At Jasper Beach, Carolyn Locke
Sardine Manifesto 7, Karin Spitfire
Sardine Manifesto 7, Karin Spitfire
The Catch
Poem about fisheries decline, Atlantic herring, sardines, Atlantic salmon, Atlantic cod
Transference, Chris Crittenden
Gut Knife, Chris Crittenden
The Spirit Of The Marsh, Joanne Jacob
The Spirit Of The Marsh, Joanne Jacob
The Catch
Poem about granite sculpture in Addison, Maine. Sculpture part of the Schoodic International Sculpture Symposium.
Figurehead, Jerry George
Figurehead, Jerry George
The Catch
Poem about ship's figurehead viewed in museum in Calais, Maine.
The Case, Nancy Tancredi
Hope, Valerie Lawson
Hope, Valerie Lawson
The Catch
Poem about cod and herring fishing, sardine canning in Downeast Maine.
John Mitchell: Journeyman-Poet, Edward D. Ives
John Mitchell: Journeyman-Poet, Edward D. Ives
Maine History
In this article folklorist Edward D. Ives traces the life and work of journeyman-poet John Mitchell, who moved from job to job in northern Maine at the beginning of the twentieth century. Ives uses oral history and a few extant poems to give us a glimpse at the life of the common laborer on the raw northern Maine frontier. Mitchell was a wanderer, but he knew the world of the ordinary working man from the inside out, and his poems express the hopes, fears, humor and irony of daily life as he saw it. “Sandy” Ives is professor emeritus from …
Queen Catherine's Rose; By Elizabeth Akers Allen, Stephanie Philbrick
Queen Catherine's Rose; By Elizabeth Akers Allen, Stephanie Philbrick
Maine History
No abstract provided.