1,030 research outputs found

    Ms. Courtney Chartier, RWWL AUC, August 2011

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    This video is a conversation with Ms. Courtney Chartier. Ms. Chartier talks about her work on the "New Georgia Encyclopedia" and "Online Voter Education Project." Andrea Jackson, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer

    Persuasive bodies: Testimonies of deep brain stimulation and Parkinson's on YouTube

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    Contemporary publics actively engage with diverse forms of media when seeking health-related information. The hugely popular digital media platform YouTube has become one means by which people share their experiences of healthcare. In this paper, we examine amateur YouTube videos featuring people receiving Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) for the treatment of Parkinson's disease. DBS has become a widely implemented treatment, and it is surrounded by high expectations that can create difficulty for clinicians, patients and their families. We examine how DBS, Parkinson's disease, and DBS recipients themselves, are delineated within these YouTube videos. The videos, we demonstrate, contain common compositional and stylistic elements that collectively represent DBS as a technological fix, and which accentuate the autonomy of the DBS recipient. The relational, interpersonal dimensions of chronic illness, and the complex impact of DBS on family dynamics, are elided. We therefore shed light on the means by which high expectations regarding DBS are sustained and circulated, and more generally, we illustrate how potentially powerful representations of medical technologies can emerge from the intersection of social media platforms, afflicted bodies and patient narratives

    Photograph of Courtney Brothers Tarred and Feathered

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    Photograph of two Black students Samuel and Roger Courtney tarred and feathered While at the time this incident was described as hazing incident carried out by University of Maine a modern interpretation, by scholars such as Karen Sieber, Humanities Specialist at the McGillicuddy Humanities Center, was that this was actually a racist attack. Sieber has featured this incident in her, Visualizing the Red Summer database and archive on the topic of the Red Summer of 1919, a term given to a nationwide wave of violence against African Americans that year. More information on this incident can be elsewhere in this collection

    Those who had

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    A collection of short stories.M.F.A.by Courtney Elizabeth War

    Au revoir Honolulu [music] /

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    For voice and piano.; Caption title.; "Author of 'Give me real Hawaiian,' 'Comeback and mend your broken doll,' 'The silver in my mother's hair,' 'My home,' &c., $c."--Cover.; Publication date approximated from 'Australian popular music : composer index", Snell, Kenneth R. 2nd ed., 1999, p. 29.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn3572216; NLA's NL copy from the collection of Keith Watson. ANL

    CHORAL ENSEMBLES of the SHEPHERD SCHOOL OF MUSIC Monday, November 25, 1991 8:00 p.m. Stude Concert Hall

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    Program: Virga Jesse floruit, Anton Bruckner (1824-1896) -- Turn thou to us, Jeffrey Nytch (1964-) -- Four motets for the season of Christmas, Francis Poulenc (1899-1963) -- A Musicological journey through the twelve days of Christmas, Craig Courtney -- Deck the hall, James McKelvy -- Gaudete, Anders Öhrwall (1932-2012)

    An Altar Boy with a Gun

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    Courtney E. Martin\u27s books, Do It Anyway, explores the lives and motivations of eight activists–not superhuman heroes, but ordinary young people searching for their own way to make a difference. Among others, we meet Raul Diaz, a prison re-entry social worker at Homeboy Industries in Los Angeles About the Lecturers: Raul Diaz is a social worker at Homeboy Industries and Courtney E. Martin Courtney E. Martin is an American feminist, author, speaker, and social and political activist. She is known for writing books, speaking at universities throughout the nation, and for co-editing the feminist blog, Feministing.com

    John Courtney Murray and Martin Luther on the Relationship between Church and State

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    In this Article, the views on the relationship between church and state of the twentieth century American Jesuit, John Courtney Murray, are compared with those of the sixteenth century theologian, Martin Luther. The author notes striking similarities between Murray\u27s position and that of Martin Luther as manifest in Luther\u27s doctrine of the two kingdoms. John Courtney Murray is credited with developing the theories that have enabled the Roman Catholic Church to establish a new and effective modern relationship with the state

    John Courtney Murray and Martin Luther on the Relationship between Church and State

    No full text
    In this Article, the views on the relationship between church and state of the twentieth century American Jesuit, John Courtney Murray, are compared with those of the sixteenth century theologian, Martin Luther. The author notes striking similarities between Murray\u27s position and that of Martin Luther as manifest in Luther\u27s doctrine of the two kingdoms. John Courtney Murray is credited with developing the theories that have enabled the Roman Catholic Church to establish a new and effective modern relationship with the state
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