Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Arts and Humanities Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

From Rock Salt: A Memoir, Donald Anderson Oct 2005

From Rock Salt: A Memoir, Donald Anderson

CutBank

No abstract provided.


"That Could Happen": Nature Writing, The Nature Fakers, And A Rhetoric Of Assent, David Thomas Sumner Jan 2005

"That Could Happen": Nature Writing, The Nature Fakers, And A Rhetoric Of Assent, David Thomas Sumner

Faculty Publications

Much has been made about the relationship between nature writing and science. The foundation of the genre is empirical observation of the more-than-human world. That’s not the whole of it, however. Because of the pairing of empiricism and other human experience, readers come to the genre with certain assumptions: they assume the text will tell them something independently verifiable about the object world--something they could see, hear, or touch if they were in the same location at the same time. They assume they are reading nonfiction, and for most readers, that distinction is important. Readers also come to nature writing …


The Bridge, Volume 2, 2005, Bridgewater State College Jan 2005

The Bridge, Volume 2, 2005, Bridgewater State College

the bridge

Volume 2 Staff

Stacy Cohen
David George
Beth Horka
David Mitchell
Elizabeth Redmond
Nicole Roy
Kimberly Silva
Cheryllynn Silvia
Janine Woodward

Mary Dondero, Faculty Advisor
Jerald Walker, Faculty Advisor
Linda Hall, Alumni Consultant
Rosann Kozlowski, Alumni Consultant


Something Worth Understanding, Rachel Lewis Jan 2005

Something Worth Understanding, Rachel Lewis

Cedarville Review

No abstract provided.


Shoes, Jenny Sullivan Jan 2005

Shoes, Jenny Sullivan

Cedarville Review

No abstract provided.


Holy Ground, Mallery Waters Jan 2005

Holy Ground, Mallery Waters

Cedarville Review

No abstract provided.


Word Incarnate, Josh Wallace Jan 2005

Word Incarnate, Josh Wallace

Cedarville Review

No abstract provided.