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Articles 3091 - 3120 of 4191
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Spring | 21-20510, David Macbride
Spring | 21-20510, David Macbride
Music Faculty Scores
Spring
Part Number: 21-20510
Previous Part Number: HL-510
Price: $1.90
Voicing: SA
Lyrics By: William Blake
Music By: David Macbride
James H. Cone: Father Of Contemporary Black Theology, Rufus Burrow Jr.
James H. Cone: Father Of Contemporary Black Theology, Rufus Burrow Jr.
The Asbury Journal
No abstract provided.
Ua68/6/1 Zephyrus, Western Kentucky University
Ua68/6/1 Zephyrus, Western Kentucky University
Student Creative Writing
The fine arts magazine of Western Kentucky University at Bowling Green.
Traces Volume 21, Number 4, Kentucky Library Research Collections
Traces Volume 21, Number 4, Kentucky Library Research Collections
Traces, the Southern Central Kentucky, Barren County Genealogical Newsletter
Traces, the South Central Kentucky Genealogical Society's quarterly newsletter, was first published in 1973. The Society changed its name in 2016 to the Barren County Historical Society. The publication features compiled genealogies, articles on local history, single-family studies and unpublished source materials related to this area.
Sericulture, Silk And South Union Shakers, Donna C. Parker, Jonathan J. Jeffrey
Sericulture, Silk And South Union Shakers, Donna C. Parker, Jonathan J. Jeffrey
SCL Faculty and Staff Publications
Kentucky Shakers were particularly adept at the process of producing silk. Kentucky's temperate climate was conducive to mulberry tree cultivation and sericulture, the raising of silkworms. South Union Sisters hatched and grew silkworms to harvest the delicate silk fibers they used in the manufacture of kerchiefs, neckwear, hat bands, bonnets, and sewing silk. Occasionally entire garments such as dresses were made from the luxurious silk.
"Parting Friends": Southeastern Kentucky Funeral Customs. 1880-1915, Sue Lynn Mcdaniel (Mcguire)
"Parting Friends": Southeastern Kentucky Funeral Customs. 1880-1915, Sue Lynn Mcdaniel (Mcguire)
SCL Faculty and Staff Publications
At the turn of the twentieth century, southeastern Kentucky remained a sparsely settled region where traditional values abounded. Throughout society, funeral rites and changes in them evince values of family, community, and religion. Visitors to the area, whether settlement-school teachers, preachers, or researchers, vividly described deathbeds, burials, and funeral occasions which illuminate local values.
Reflecting the writers' urban prejudices, these Journals and publications along with contemporary newspaper accounts provide insight into southeastern Kentucky mourning customs during the years 1880 to 1915. Although the turn of the twentieth century brought change in the way urban dwellers dealt with mourning, their mountain …
Kentucky Humanities Council Catalog 1993-1994, Kentucky Library Research Collections
Kentucky Humanities Council Catalog 1993-1994, Kentucky Library Research Collections
Kentucky Humanities Council Catalog
The Kentucky Humanities Council is an independent, nonprofit affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities committed to providing programs and services that facilitate an understanding and appreciation of Kentucky’s cultural heritage and future. The Council’s program catalog features scholars from across the Commonwealth who make presentations on a myriad of humanities topics. Later, costumed actors, who delivered dramatic monologues about Kentucky’s famous, infamous, and composite personalities, were added. The catalog has gone by various titles over the years: Kentucky Humanities Resource Center, Kentucky Humanities Council Speakers Bureau, Whole Humanities Catalog, and Humanities Catalog. This …
South Union Messenger (January 1993), Kentucky Library Research Collections
South Union Messenger (January 1993), Kentucky Library Research Collections
South Union Messenger
No abstract provided.
1993 Minutes Of The Kings Mountain Baptist Association, Kings Mountain Baptist Association
1993 Minutes Of The Kings Mountain Baptist Association, Kings Mountain Baptist Association
Kings Mountain Baptist Association Minute Books
The 1993 meeting of the Kings Mountain Baptist Association met at Westview Baptist Church and Putnam Memorial Baptist Church in Shelby, NC. The minutes are dedicated to the memory of Rev. Aaron C. Phipps, Robert Bruce Wilson, and Marlow Arthur Stroup. A lectureship at Gardner-Webb University was founded in honor of former Director of Missions, Rev. C.O. Greene. Dr. Sam James, Vice-President of Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa for the Foreign Mission Board, was a guest speaker. The first project of a partnership with the Greater Rochester Baptist Association in Rochester, New York was held in July.
Calliope, Armstrong State College
Table Of Contents (V.5, 1993)
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
No abstract provided.
In Memoriam: Kenneth E. Kidd, 1906-1994, Jamie Hunter, Karlis Karklins
In Memoriam: Kenneth E. Kidd, 1906-1994, Jamie Hunter, Karlis Karklins
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
Pioneer bead researcher Kenneth Earl Kidd passed away peacefully in Peterborough, Ontario, on 26 February 1994, at the age of 87. This memorial reviews his distinguished career and provides an extensive list of his publications.
Reviews And End Matter
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
Francis: Beads of the World: A Collector's Guide with Price Reference reviewed by Stefany Tomalin
Picard and Picard: Beads from the West African Trade Series -Volume VII reviewed by Marvin T. Smith
Crystal Myths, Inc.: Lewis C. Wilson on Glass Bead Making (video) and Lewis C. Wilson on Lampworking: Advanced Beads, Bracelets, Marbles (video) reviewed by Karlis Karklins
Jargstorf: Baubles, Buttons and Beads: The Heritage of Bohemia reviewed by Anita von Kahler Gumpert
De Vore: Beads of the Bison Robe Trade: The Fort Union Trading Post Collection reviewed by Timothy K. Perttula
Bedford (ed.): Ezakwantu: Beadwork from the Eastern Cape …
The A Speo Method Of Heat Rounding Drawn Glass Beads And Its Archaeological Manifestations, Karlis Karklins
The A Speo Method Of Heat Rounding Drawn Glass Beads And Its Archaeological Manifestations, Karlis Karklins
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
From at least the early 17th century to the latter part of the 18th century, drawn glass beads over about 4 mm in diameter were generally rounded in European glasshouses using a method called a speo by the Italians who apparently invented it. The little-known process involved mounting a number of tube segments on the tines of a multi-pronged iron implement which was then inserted in a furnace and turned until the tubes were rounded to the desired degree. Beads produced in this manner often exhibit distinctive characteristics and are easily identified in archaeological collections.
Gold-Glass Beads: A Review Of The Evidence, Maud Spaer
Gold-Glass Beads: A Review Of The Evidence, Maud Spaer
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
The study of gold-glass beads was given a considerable boost in the 1970s by Weinberg's report on their manufacture in Hellenistic Rhodes and by Alekseeva' s and Boon's studies on finds from southern Russia and Britain, respectively. Nothing comparable has been published in the intervening years, but scattered new information has appeared. This paper aims to survey and review the available data on manufacturing technique, style, provenience and chronology. An attempt is also made to fit gold-glass beads into the general framework of glass history. The main focus is on the finds of the Mediterranean and related regions in pre-Islamic …
Powdered-Glass Beads And Bead Trade In Mauritania, Marie-José Opper, Howard Opper
Powdered-Glass Beads And Bead Trade In Mauritania, Marie-José Opper, Howard Opper
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
Artisans in Kiffa and several other towns in southern Mauritania have produced a unique kind of powdered-glass bead for several generations. Commonly called "Kiffa beads," they generally copy the designs and forms of ancient beads, as well as more recent European examples. This article discusses their history, manufacture and relevance in Mauritanian culture. While production of the beads recently ceased for a time, several women have again begun to make them though the new varieties are not as inspiring as their predecessors.
Lun Bawang Beads, Heidi Munan
Lun Bawang Beads, Heidi Munan
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
The Lun Bawang and related peoples of east Sarawak, west Sabah and Brunei have a long tradition of using beads for personal ornamentation and as value objects. They share in the general Borneo bead heritage, but follow their own tastes and fashions. Some Lun Bawang have started reproducing their favorite opaque beads from clay to sell as well as to wear on informal occasions. This new cottage industry brings a satisfactory income to the beadmakers, and helps to preserve their heirloom property.
Captions And Color Plates (V.5, 1993)
Captions And Color Plates (V.5, 1993)
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
No abstract provided.
Beads: Journal Of The Society Of Bead Researchers - Volume 5 (Complete)
Beads: Journal Of The Society Of Bead Researchers - Volume 5 (Complete)
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
No abstract provided.
"This Song" Conspicuous Poetry In Hebrew Prose, James W. Watts
"This Song" Conspicuous Poetry In Hebrew Prose, James W. Watts
Religion - All Scholarship
The Hebrew Bible contains many passages in which prose narrative surrounds conspicuous poetry. The various theoretical and practical difficulties in distinguishing Hebrew prose from verse in other texts do not negate this observation. Explicit genre labels often appear in both the prose frameworks and the beginnings of poems, telling readers that the genre and mode have changed. The interpretive problem then becomes, not whether this is verse, but why poetry appears precisely here. What does poetic expression accomplish that Hebrew prose narrative cannot or will not do?
Comparative study of conspicuous inset poetry suggests that Hebrew narratives use it to …
New Jersey Catholic Records Newsletter, Vol. 12, No.2, New Jersey Catholic Historical Commission
New Jersey Catholic Records Newsletter, Vol. 12, No.2, New Jersey Catholic Historical Commission
New Jersey Catholic Historical Commission newsletters
The Commission announces the “Collecting, Preserving, and Writing local Catholic History in New Jersey” conference to be held on March 30, 1993. Mrs. Miriam Murphy is honored for her serivce to the Commission. There is also a “Meet the Commission” installment and personnel changes. The first Bishop of Trenton, Most Reverend Michael J. O'Farrell, is discussed as a true servant to immigrants and orphans alike.
Interpretations Of Conflict: Ethics, Pacifism, And The Just War Tradition (Book Review), G. Scott Davis
Interpretations Of Conflict: Ethics, Pacifism, And The Just War Tradition (Book Review), G. Scott Davis
Religious Studies Faculty Publications
Review of the book, Interpretations of Conflict: Ethics, Pacifism, and the Just War Tradition, by Richard B. Miller. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991.
Policraticus (Book Review), G. Scott Davis
Policraticus (Book Review), G. Scott Davis
Religious Studies Faculty Publications
Review of the book, Policraticus, edited and translated by Cary J. Nederman. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990.
Reading The Endings In Katherine Anne Porter's "Old Mortality", Suzanne W. Jones
Reading The Endings In Katherine Anne Porter's "Old Mortality", Suzanne W. Jones
English Faculty Publications
With these final sentences of "Old Mortality" (1937), Katherine Anne Porter qualifies the progress eighteen-year-old Miranda has made toward self-knowledge and sophisticated reading strategies. This long story is a bildungsroman of sorts, tracing Miranda's development from childhood to young adulthood, but focusing particularly on her apprenticeship as a reader. Porter links Miranda's quest for self-discovery with her attempts to determine fact from fiction in the stories her family tells about the love affairs, brief marriage, and early death of her beautiful Aunt Amy. By dismissing both her father's romantic legend and her Cousin Eva's feminist critique as untrue--by focusing on …
Family Secrets And The Mysteries Of The Moonstone, Elisabeth Rose Gruner
Family Secrets And The Mysteries Of The Moonstone, Elisabeth Rose Gruner
English Faculty Publications
Theorists of detective fiction usually discuss the genre’s interest in the discovery and expulsion of a crime, perceived as a foreign element which has invaded a secure community or family. While this tendency is apparent in The Moonstone, one of the genre’s founding texts, a contradictory impulse runs equally strongly through the novel, one with profound implications for the security of the Victorian family. For The Moonstone is, to a great extent, motivated by an impulse to secrecy, not to tell, to cover up family’s complicity in crime. Franklin Blake’s editorial strategy seems designed to this end: he has …
Jubilation On Bunessan (Morning Has Broken), John G. Barr
Jubilation On Bunessan (Morning Has Broken), John G. Barr
Music Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Homage To L. M. Gottschalk, John G. Barr
Homage To L. M. Gottschalk, John G. Barr
Music Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
[Introduction To] Politica Y Posmodernidad: Hacia Una Lectura De La Anti-Modernidad En Lationoamerica, Claudia Ferman
[Introduction To] Politica Y Posmodernidad: Hacia Una Lectura De La Anti-Modernidad En Lationoamerica, Claudia Ferman
Bookshelf
Me propongo aquí bosquejar brevemente el recorrido argumental que dio sustancia al presente trabajo. Me gustaría empezar citando a Cortázar. La obra de Cortázar encarna de alguna manera un conjunto de debates que se produjeron en las décadas del 60 y 70 en gran parte del mundo, y de los que nosotros hemos querido dar cuenta desde la nueva perspectiva que abrieron los 80. Más adelante nos ocuparemos de eso, ahora vayamos a dar Ia vuelta a los mundos del 60.
Whither Went The Upstairs Gentry? : The Colonial Council Of Virginia From 1763 To 1776, Charles Stephen Weidman
Whither Went The Upstairs Gentry? : The Colonial Council Of Virginia From 1763 To 1776, Charles Stephen Weidman
Master's Theses
Of the three branches of Colonial Virginia government, only two, the House of Burgesses and the Royal Governor, have been well chronicled during the period immediately preceding the American Revolution. The ignored third branch, the Colonial Council, has been largely dismissed by the few historians treating the subject as inconsequential-both as a political institution, and in the influence of its individual members. Witness both the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography and the William and Mary Quarterly, each with over a century dedicated to the nooks and crannies of all history Virginian, have collectively produced but a single article …