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Articles 1 - 30 of 91
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Twoothree: Uta Journal Of The Arts, Da-Shiva Francois, Sydney Gillentine
Twoothree: Uta Journal Of The Arts, Da-Shiva Francois, Sydney Gillentine
twoOthree
twoOthree UTA Journal of the Arts: Volume 1 Spring 2024
Mom, Svea I. Silverberg
Mom, Svea I. Silverberg
Emerging Writers
This nonfiction essay gives a look into beginning the grieving process of an abusive parent.
Zero, Amber Brandau
Zero, Amber Brandau
WRIT: Journal of First-Year Writing
A piece of literary nonficiton abut the struggles of learning how to read.
And The Light Shines On: Sic Luceat Lux Vestra, Ana Schnellmann
And The Light Shines On: Sic Luceat Lux Vestra, Ana Schnellmann
Arrow Rock
No abstract provided.
Friendship In A Time Of Pandemic, Laura Reilly
Lost Routine, Melissa Fritz
Hurt To Love, Christa Kaye Jishelle Casidsid
Hurt To Love, Christa Kaye Jishelle Casidsid
Night Flight Journal
Family dynamics come in many different forms. Some are regarded by society as "healthy," others "toxic," but there are instances where there is a gray line. Once an only child grown to the older sibling, this daughter watches her family relationship. More particularly, she watches her parent that has been there by her side ever since she could remember. "Healthy" or "toxic" are words lost in confusion in her home. She cannot help but feel the pain of the actions and words from the years that built up in her struggle of endurance and martyr sacrifice.
We Used To Be Brothers: Partition 1947, Ukasha Farooq
We Used To Be Brothers: Partition 1947, Ukasha Farooq
CLAMANTIS: The MALS Journal
No abstract provided.
Momentum Of The Future, Daniel Affsprung
Momentum Of The Future, Daniel Affsprung
CLAMANTIS: The MALS Journal
No abstract provided.
Faculty Profile: Gary Lenhart, James Washington Jr.
Faculty Profile: Gary Lenhart, James Washington Jr.
CLAMANTIS: The MALS Journal
No abstract provided.
Faculty Profile: Christopher Wren, Casey Carpenter
Faculty Profile: Christopher Wren, Casey Carpenter
CLAMANTIS: The MALS Journal
No abstract provided.
An Impossible Time, Julia Ceraolo
Empty Manicotti Shells, Julia N. Schultz
Sermon Soup, Abigail C. Wisser
Patience, Emma M. Foster
Patience, Emma M. Foster
Cedarville Review
A short piece of creative nonfiction about my grandma teaching me how to play solitaire in the wake of Hurricane Irma.
Grounded, Abigail Shaffer
Second Birth Into Paradox, Abigail C. Wisser
A Roof Of One's Own: Widow Walking In The Anthropocene, Anna C. Mullen
A Roof Of One's Own: Widow Walking In The Anthropocene, Anna C. Mullen
The Goose
A nonfiction work that explores widow's walks in a time of climate change on the coasts. This piece walks the lines between speculative fiction and lyrical essay.
Never Forgotten, Kaylee Patton
Mom’S Famous Pie Crust, Kwyn Bollinger
Volume 10, Issue 2: Full Issue
Volume 10, Issue 2: Full Issue
Manuscripts
Full issue of the March 2014 issue of Manuscripts. Includes work by: Lucy Kaufman, Thomas J. Luck, Mary M. Schortemeier, Verse Forms Class, Jeanne Gass, Jack DeVine, Mildred Reimer, Donald Rider, Donald Morgan, Joe Howitt, Elizabeth Hyatt, Arline Hyde, Stuart Palmer, George Zainey, Peggy O'Donnell, Lester Hunt, Arthur Graham, Rosemary Haviland, Fayetta Hall, and Jane Burrin.
Excerpts
Manuscripts
Excerpts from additional submissions by authors: Betty Lewis, Joseph C. Greenlee, Suzanne Weesner, Katherine Armstrong, and J. Wm. Lynn.
The Butler University Library, Fayetta Hall
The Butler University Library, Fayetta Hall
Manuscripts
There are many features about our school which I admire, and there are surely some features which I have not yet learned to appreciate fully. One prominent feature which falls into both of these classes is the university library. My realization of its worth has increased with my growing knowledge of the library's history and development.
When our college was known as the Northwestern Christian University, it was located on College Avenue. As far as is known, no real library was then existant. However, as far back as 1873, a small room in the building was set aside and two …
Our Christmas Tree, Lester Hunt
Our Christmas Tree, Lester Hunt
Manuscripts
We, like many other families, have our own special customs. We have our holiday customs, our dinner customs, our own way of making beds, and our own brand of humour. There is one holiday custom, however, that I especially treasure because I had a share in its initiation. It is the custom of getting our own Christmas tree.
As I remember this first experience, it took place about a week before Christmas, but we still hadn't found a Christmas tree that we liked. It was then that we "menfolks" decided to get our own tree. I was eight years old …
The Scrawl Of An American, Joe Howitt
The Scrawl Of An American, Joe Howitt
Manuscripts
An American is the sum of all the contributions, both good and bad, of all the peoples on earth. Our country was founded to satisfy the desires and to develop the interests of everyone, be he Jew or Gentile, white or yellow. At first America was settled by people who had been religiously persecuted, and then later by those who sought economic gain in the land of "golden opportunity."
The American, from the time of the writing of the constitution up until the present day, has valued more than anything ~is right to worship as he pleases, to enter into …
Upon Entering My Seventeenth Year, Donald Morgan
Upon Entering My Seventeenth Year, Donald Morgan
Manuscripts
The past summer was, by all of the usual standards, uneventful. It was the first summer I can remember that did not include an automobile trip to the East, West, or to the beloved "north country." Instead, I attended summer school for six weeks, then suffered the worst month of absolute idleness that I have ever experienced. Although disappointing in its monotony, the vacation was not entirely without advantages. In my school course, I was introduced to a subject which interests me intensely, economics. Although totally different from the sciences I had studied previously, it fully satisfied my craving for …
Rubber And The War, Mildred Reimer
Rubber And The War, Mildred Reimer
Manuscripts
We walk on it, ride on it, wear it, and use it in our pastimes. We make use of it for comfort and safety. We see it everywhere. Much of it that is used is hidden from us under silk, cotton, or steel. This popular product can be made to stretch ten times its length or treated so that it will not stretch at all. It can be spun so fine that it resembles a spider's web or made so lasting that it will outwear steel. It can be made to withstand hot or cold temperatures, to absorb water or …
The Camera Marches To War, Thomas J. Luck
The Camera Marches To War, Thomas J. Luck
Manuscripts
"Since the United States is engaged in a deadly struggle for its very exsistence, every industry and every man, woman, and child must alter their peace-time operations so as to fit into the war program," declared Paul V. McNutt, Federal man-power commissioner, in a recent speech. Nowhere is the will for readjustments to fit the war program any greater than in industry. The photographic profession has especially made a large contribution to the geared-up production, and the results of these changes may bring about new types of endeavor for the profession.
Volume 10, Issue 1: Full Issue
Volume 10, Issue 1: Full Issue
Manuscripts
Full issue of the November 1942 issue of Manuscripts. Includes work by: Patricia Sylvester, Lucy Kaufman, Richard Moores, Janet Jarrett, Mary Margarette Schortemeier, Virginia Skidmore, Jeanne Gass, Jeane Siskel, Bob Dyer, Thomas Haynes, William Roberts, Nancy Rodecker, Doris Daley, W. S. McLean, Peggy O'Donnell, Dorothy Masters, Ann Holloway, Dick Runnels, Lois Jean Shipley, Mary Elizabeth Donnell, Don Griffith, and Betty Alice Hodson.