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    8224 research outputs found

    Two Poems: Opening Up; I Preserve My Father\u27s Live Body

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    JOE DAVID BELLAMY\u27s most recent book is The New Fiction: Interviews with Innovative American Writers (University of Illinois Press). An associate professor of English at St. Lawrence University, he is also editor of fiction international. His work has appeared in a number of magazines, including Atlantic Monthly, Partisan Review, and Novel

    Risks and Possibilities: The Poetry of A. R. Ammons

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    PETER STEVENS, whose Pavase sequence appeared in Ontario Review #2, is former poetry editor of Canadian Forum and the author of numerous articles, poems, and reviews. His most recent book is And the Dying Sky Like Blood, a cycle of poems for Norman Bethune. He teaches at the University of Windsor

    Useful Fictions: Legends of the Self in Roth, Blaise, Kroetsch, and Nowlan

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    ANN MANDEL teaches Canadian and American literature at York University, Toronto, and has recently published a monograph Measures: Robert Creeley\u27s Poetry with Coach House Press

    Five Poets from Five Countries

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    TOM MARSHALL, poetry editor of The Canadian Forum, has published books on A. M . Klein and D. H . Lawrence. His third collection of poetry, The Earth-Book, was published last fall by Oberon Press. He teaches at Queen\u27s University in Kingston, Ontario

    To the Etruscan Poets

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    RICHARD WILBUR, Professor of English at Wesleyan University, has published a number of books, including The Poems of Richard Wilbur (1963) and Walking to Sleep: New Poems and Translations (1969); his translations of Moliere have been widely and successfully performed in the United States and England. Recently elected president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, he lives in· Cummington, Massachusetts

    What are you?: The impacts of salient relationships and monoracist experiences on multiracial individuals’ well-being

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    The multiracial population is one of the fastest growing groups as interracial partnerships continue to rise (Lee, 2008). This dissertation focused on multiracial Indian and white individuals and explored the processes of developing one’s identity and social relationships through identifiable experiences. The adult participants, located throughout the United States, recalled experiences from throughout their life that they encountered with peers, family members, community members, romantic partners, and other systems of support. Using Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) methodology, the research questions guiding the study were: 1) What are the ways in which salient relationships affect an Indian and white individual’s meaning-making of their multiracial identity? 2) What are the ways that monoracist experiences impact an Indian and white individual’s well-being? 3) What would an Indian and white individual like to tell mental health practitioners in regard to working with multiracial clients? The researcher’s findings from in-depth interviews with six participants included three major themes: A) Positive Resilience-Supporting Experiences, B) Negative-Hurtful Experiences, and C) Navigating Challenges and Life. An analysis of these findings, implications for practice, and suggestions for future research are discussed

    Two Poems: Friend; Sunup

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    NAOMI CLARK has published poems in The Antioch Review, The Beloit Poetry Journal, The Malahat Review, The Far Point, and elsewhere. She teaches at San Jose State University in California

    Papa

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    MARY GREGORY lives and teaches in Westchester County, New York

    Two Poems: Elm Trees; Getting There

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    EUGENE MCNAMARA, founder and editor of Windsor Review, has published poetry, fiction, essays and reviews in a number of North American magazines, including Canadian Fiction Magazine, Quarry, Malahat, and Titmouse Review. His most recent book is Diving for the Body

    From Desire to Decision (A Syllabic Synopsis of a Short Story)

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    KEN STANGE, a psychology lab instructor in North Bay, Ontario, edits Nebula Magazine and has poems published or forthcoming in The Canadian Forum, The Dalhousie Review, Event, Waves, and elsewhere

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