197,890 research outputs found
Thomas Anstey Guthrie's Madhouse Shuffle: steps toward a nightmare scenario
This essay explores a film scenario called An Evil Spirit which Thomas Anstey Guthrie wrote in 1916. It studies the scenario’s origins in two remarkable prose narratives, one of them unpublished even now, that Anstey had produced years before: ‘The Statement of V. M. patient at Bethnal House Asylum, July: 19: 1886’ (1888) and The Statement of Stella Maberly (1896). With the birth of the movies came an opportunity for Anstey to rethink this material, introducing new elements but also drawing out what was latent or implicit in the earlier works. While Anstey was by no means the most technically adept or inventive of screenwriters, he proved an eager learner; and, as a prime beneficiary of the developing early C20 synergy between fiction and cinema, he is a figure from whom we too have much to learn about the spirit of the age
Introduction
This book arose from a landmark Australian conference run at St Peter’s
College-Adelaide in September 2014, Flourishing in Faith: Positive Psychology and Theology. The conference was jointly hosted by St Barnabas College, an Anglican theological college, and St Peter’s College, an Anglican school for boys (K-12)
Fatal attractions: Death, femininity, and children’s literature
Book Description:\ud
Crossing the Boundaries is a ground breaking new text for Children's Literature courses that draws on the disciplines of Arts and Education. As reflected in the title, Crossing the Boundaries analyses children's literature from a truly interdisciplinary perspective, with academics, authors and illustrators contributing to the book.\ud
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In this edited collection, a focus on Australian children's literature is balanced with studies and examples from international children's literature. The selection of contributors from US, Canada UK, South Africa and New Zealand helps provides the global coverage. \ud
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A genre-based and thematic approach is utilised throughout the book
sj-docx-1-jpx-10.1177_23743735221092623 - Supplemental material for Integrating the Choosing Wisely 5 Questions into Family Meetings in the Intensive Care Unit: A Randomized Controlled Trial Investigating the Effect on Family Perceived Involvement in Decision-Making
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jpx-10.1177_23743735221092623 for Integrating the Choosing Wisely 5 Questions into Family Meetings in the Intensive Care Unit: A Randomized Controlled Trial Investigating the Effect on Family Perceived Involvement in Decision-Making by Ashleigh Drury, Danielle M Muscat, Bradley Wibrow, Angela Jacques, Matthew Anstey in Journal of Patient Experience</p
(084) Looking up Anstey Arm
Excerpt from page 31 of "B.C.'s Inland Empire" by Erskine Burnett associated with this image: Leaving Sicamous about 10:30 a. m. our first stop was a Bruhn's sawmill near the site of Eagle City. A second stop was made at Marble Point where a deposit of marl shows up near the water. It was here that a cowbird flew onto the barge and stayed with us for most of the voyage. When we got out into the middle of the lake again it was evidently afraid to attempt the flight to land. Capt. Smith told us when he was navigating on Great Slave Lake in the fall of the year flocks of ptarmigan would land on the deck and travel for a considerable distance without fear of the crew. Just before reaching the Narrows Anstey Arm can be seen stretching out to the right with the snow-capped peaks on the east side of the Columbia Valley just visible in the distance. Our third stop was at the Forestry Station at Cinnemosun Narrows
Dr. Duane M. Jackson, Morehouse College, July 2011
This video is a conversation with Dr. Duane M. Jackson. Dr. Jackson talks about his paper, "Recall and the Serial Position Effect: The Role of Primacy and Recency on Accounting Students' Performance." Jackie Daniel, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer
"Reflections on the subject of Emigration from Europe with a view to Settlement in the United States" By M. Carey.
"Reflections on the subject of Emigration from Europe with a view to Settlement in the United States: containing bried sketches of the moral and political character of those states.
By M. Carey, member of the American philosophical, and of the American Antiquarian Society, and author of The Olive Branch, Cindiciae Hibernicae, essays on banking, on political economy, and on internal improvement.
To which are now added the English editor's comments on the subject; together with Important Advice to Emigrants, and Cautions Against Impositions Practiced in the Outports
Dispelling the Myths Behind First-author Citation Counts
We conducted a full-scale evaluative citation analysis study of scholars in the XML research field to explore just how different from each other author rankings resulting from different citation counting methods actually are, and to demonstrate the capability of emerging data and tools on the Web in supporting more realistic citation counting methods. Our results contest some common arguments for the continued
use of first-author citation counts in the evaluation of scholars, such as high correlations between author rankings by first-author citation counts and other citation
counting methods, and high costs of using more realistic citation counting methods that are not well-supported by the ISI databases. It is argued that increasingly available digital full text research papers make it possible for citation analysis studies to go beyond what the ISI databases have directly supported and to employ more
sophisticated methods
The new Bath guide: or, Memoirs of the B-N-R-D family. In a series of poetical epistles.
Colophon: W. Wilson, Printer, St. John's Square.Published anonymously. By Christopher Anstey--Cf. DNB.Advertisements: [4] p. at end.Pages [ii], [iv], [1], [62], [64], [128], and [156] blank.[]⁴, [B]-K⁸, L⁶ [w/m: BUTTANSHAW 1806]Eng. cat.Mode of access: Internet.H.W. Edwards, August 22, 1968.Polished tan calf, black lettering-piece, gilt spine rules, decorations, and titling, gilt roll pattern rule cover borders
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