11,648 research outputs found

    American Women Writers: Amy M. Clark

    No full text
    A 2011 conversation with the author Amy M. Clark about her life and the inspiration for her work

    Panel Nine: Building Nations, Breaking Societies

    No full text
    Moderator: Thomas Kühne (Clark University) Luca Fenoglio (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)Resisting the \u27Final Solution\u27? The \u27Royal Inspectorate of Racial Police\u27 in Nice and the Onset of a Fascist (anti-) Jewish Policy, March - July 1943 download paper (login required) Andrew Kornbluth (University of California-Berkeley)Crowdsourcing Genocide: Comparing Jewish and Polish Experiences of Collaboration, 1939-1944 download paper (login required) Natalya Lazar (Clark University)The Aftermath of the Holocaust: Jewish Survivors and Soviet Policies in Postwar Chernivtsi, 1944-1946paper has been removed per author Raz Segal (Tel Aviv University, Israel)Instances of Bystanding: Jews and non-Jews Respond to Each Other’s Plight in Hungary’s Borderlands during World War II download paper (login required

    BDES1020 'Continuous City' <Amy Clark>

    No full text
    The Old City of Jerusalem, a conurbation of utmost historical and religious significance, is comprised of four distinct quarters of disparate cultural facets. This socio-political environment is consequentially founded in great civil division, formulating these distinct city precincts. Furthermore, these variant quarters are home to a myriad of culturally-specific art galleries and memorial museums, each founded in a static appreciation of Jerusalem and its inhabitants. However, while the city is highly vivacious along the main arteries of the street grid, it is devoid of any dynamic permanent cultural spaces. Hence, this proposal encompasses a community concert hall founded on the notion of bringing these disparate cultures into proximity, ultimately endeavouring to amass these peoples in a non-hierarchical environment. The design for this theatre is founded on the concept of deconstructing the physical and metaphysical barriers present within the Old City to create a uniquely heterogeneous community that celebrates diversity. Consequentially, the structure is founded on the iconic dome, reworked such that its rigid form is being physically and metaphorically deconstructed. Being enveloped in Jerusalem stone and local timbers, the concert hall attempts to rework existing traditional mediums to develop a dynamic space common to all citizens of Jerusalem

    Amy Finkelstein: 2012 John Bates Clark Medalist

    No full text
    Amy Finkelstein is the 2012 recipient of the John Bates Clark Medal from the American Economic Association. The core concerns of Amy's research program have been insurance markets and health care. She has addressed whether asymmetric information leads to inefficiencies in insurance markets, how large social insurance programs affect healthcare markets, and the determinants of innovation incentives in health care. We describe a number of Amy's key research contributions, with particular emphasis on those identified by the Honors and Awards Committee of the American Economic Association in her Clark Medal citation, as well as her broader contributions to the field of economics

    Yearbooks of Clark College and Clark Atlanta University

    No full text
    Yearbooks of Clark College and Clark Atlanta Universit

    The Scarlet - Volume XCI, No. 20 (April 7, 2011)

    No full text
    The September 17, 2009 edition of The Scarlet (est. 1939), Clark University\u27s student-run newspaper. The Scarlet is intellectually and editorially independent of the University. The cover story for this issue reports on International Gala, an annual cultural showcase put on by Clark\u27s International Students Association. Other headlines and coverage include a new Latin American and Latino Studies concentration, journalist Amy Goodman\u27s visit to Clark, the history of the modern hipster, a profile of Clark alum and Seven Hills Foundation CEO David Jordan, the U.S. and China, a possible government shutdown, and more. Every issue of The Scarlet from the 2011-2012 academic year to the present can be found here, located in our Student Works section. Scanned at 400dpi.https://commons.clarku.edu/clarkscarlets/1024/thumbnail.jp

    Truth and (or) Fiction? Graphic histories, fictional renderings, and the speculative turn in the history of racial violence

    No full text
    To celebrate the publication of “The Confessions of Matthew Strong,” the debut novel by Professor Ousmane Power-Greene, a faculty panel will examine how the history of racial violence is depicted in fiction. Panelists include: Ousmane Power-Greene, history and Africana studies Amy Richter, history Shelly Tenenbaum, sociology and Holocaust and genocide studies Esther Jones, English and Dean of the Faculty Kourtney Senquiz, Englis

    Clark College Catalogs

    No full text
    The catalog for Clark University later named Clark College (now Clark Atlanta University) provides information on the degree programs, course offerings, policies, procedures, statistics, financial costs, buildings, services, administration staff, Board of Trustees, and faculty. Early years of the catalog also include lists of matriculating students and alumni. See also, Atlanta University Bulletins: https://radar.auctr.edu/islandora/object/002.au.bulletin:9999 See also, Clark Atlanta University Catalogs: https://radar.auctr.edu/islandora/object/auc.004.cau.catalogs:9999 </b

    Clark College and Clark Atlanta University Photographs

    No full text
    Clark Atlanta University was established in 1988 as a result of the consolidation of two independent historically black institutions - Atlanta University (1865) and Clark College (1869). The bulk of this collection contains photographs of Clark College before its consolidation with Atlanta University. The photographs show student life including classes, athletics, clubs, sororities and fraternities, and graduation. Also included in this collection are notable people such as Vivian Henderson, Carl Ware, Vernon Jordan, C. Eric Lincoln, Thomas Cole, Jesse Jackson, Andrew Young, and James P. Brawley. At the AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library we are always striving to improve our digital collections. We welcome additional information about people, places, or events depicted in any of the works in this collection. To submit information, please contact us at [email protected]

    The Clark Atlanta University Panther

    No full text
    Atlanta University was founded in 1865 by the American Missionary Association with assistance from the Freedman's Bureau. Clark College was founded as Clark University in 1869 by the Freedmen's Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church (now United Methodist Church). The college was named for Bishop Davis W. Clark, the first president of the Freedmen's Aid Society. In 1945, The Panther became the official student newspaper of Clark College, a decision made by the student body and faculty advisor. Prior to this,'The Mentor had been the representative college journal of student expression. Clark Atlanta University is the consolidation of Clark College and Atlanta University in 1988. This digital collection consists of 260 issues spanning dates from 1944 through 2017
    corecore