375,812 research outputs found

    Interview of Angela S. Chesser by Debbie Cannon Freece

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    In an interview conducted at the Medical Heritage Center at The Ohio State University, Angela S. Chesser describes her graduate education at Ohio State and her nursing career. Chesser, who knew from a young age that she wanted to be a nurse, earned her degree from Duke University, then worked as a nurse at a drug crisis center in Durham, North Carolina. She decided to return to school for her master’s degree in psychiatric nursing, which she obtained in 1975 from Ohio State. She then worked at several pediatric facilities before returning to Ohio State to earn a doctorate in counseling, which she obtained in 1982. She then worked at Harding Hospital in a number of positions, including her role as assistant director of psychiatry. She retired in 2014 and spends much of her time volunteering, including working with narcotics-addicted babies in the Wexner Medical Center’s neonatal care unit

    Gritos del infierno para dispertar [sic] al mundo...

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    Palau, 32547 lo supone impreso en 1761. María Angela Martí imprime ca. 1726-1768Sign.: [calderón]-2[calderón]\p8\s, A-Z\p8\s, 2A-2E\p8\

    Angela Wesley Goldberg Journal January 2014

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    In this journal Glen S. Goldberg Scholarship Winner Angela Wesley shares her internship at RLE Charleston during the Spring 2014 semester

    Angela Wesley Goldberg Journal January 2014

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    Find out how to apply for the Glen S. Goldberg Scholarship athttps://www.brockport.edu/ielIn this journal Glen S. Goldberg Scholarship Winner Angela Wesley shares her internship at RLE Charleston during the Spring 2014 semester.SUNY BrockportGoldberg Scholarshi

    LAVIN, Angela S. de

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    Carta de Angela S. de Lavín a Soledad González. Le pide que interponga su influencia ante el Gral. PEC para resolver su problema relativo a el "Perímetro Lavin" propiedad que fue suya

    Journey towards the mother : myth, origins and the daughter's desire in the fiction of Angela Carter

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    This study examines Angela Carter’s demythologising of origin myths and will investigate the extent to which her fictions offer viable alternatives that allow for productive representations of women and gender relations outside patriarchal paradigms. In the first half of the thesis (Chapters 1-3), I will primarily focus on how several of Carter’s earlier texts deconstruct existing mythical spaces, particularly the biblical creation story in Genesis. The Genesis myth is central to socio-historical constructions of gendered identities, and in itself, central to Carter’s imagination. She repeatedly returns to this myth in her challenging of the ways in which patriarchal narratives construct violent relations between self and other, specifically where ‘woman’ is situated as the repressed other of male desires and fears. Alongside her demythologising of Genesis, Carter deconstructs Freudian myths of sexual maturation, exposing where these also set up a relationship of antagonism or enmity between the sexes. Although Chapter One will explore how Carter attempts to revise these origin myths from a positive stance, Two and Three will focus on the inherent difficulties faced by the female subject in her struggle against patriarchal myths and their violent oppression of female autonomy. The second half of the thesis (Chapters 4-6) will shift to an investigation of how Carter’s later texts set up both possibilities and challenges for women when attempting to construct their own narratives of origin. Through her problematising of matriarchal myths and feminist fantasies of self-creation, Carter emphasises the need for confronting limitations rather than celebrating transgressions as entirely liberating. The thesis will conclude, however, with an examination of where Carter’s own attempts at remythologising opens up an alternative space, or ‘elsewhere’, of feminine desires that allows for a refiguring of the female subject as well as more reciprocal relations between the sexes

    Introduction: Experiencing and Contesting Spatialized Injustice in the City

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    This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this book. The book deals in different ways with experiences of spatialized injustice in the contemporary city. It addresses shocking aspects of city life produced by social inequality and examines how social exclusion and diverse forms of social violence are contested, debated, and represented. The book addresses urban space as a site and object of struggle between social groups and reveals how in these struggles space, social inequality and social difference, inscribed in physical and symbolic boundaries, intersect. It reveals variegated ways of how ‘territories of injustice’ are fought over. The book explores spatialized social boundaries, established through social differences that result from unequal access to and unequal distribution of resources and social opportunities
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