5,248 research outputs found
Caroline Gordon Collection
Arrangement Description
EXTENT
Linear Feet: 2 linear feet
Number of Containers: 2 boxes
Series 1: Writings, 31 files
Series 2: Lectures, 19 files
Series 3: Courses, 10 files
Series 4: Book Reviews, 5 files
Series 5: About Caroline Gordon,8 files
Series 6: Correspondence, 18 files
Series 7: Books, 5 books
Series 8: Media: 9 digital files, 9 cassettes, 2 reelsCOLLECTION DETAILS
<---Please open FindingAid .pdf under "FILES" to see full collection details To request any materials from this collection please email: [email protected]
BIOGRAPHICAL / Historical Note: Twentieth-century novelist Caroline Gordon was born into the Kentucky line of the extensive Meriwether family in 1895. Exploration of the family's past and its evolution is a major theme of her fiction. She grew up at Merry Mont in Todd County, near Clarksville where she received her early education. She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Bethany College in 1916. Her father is the idealized subject of Gordon's second novel, Alec Maury, Sportsman (1934), and the central character in her much-anthologized story, "Old Red." Gordon taught briefly; then, as a journalist, she became one of the first reviewers to comment favorably on a new Nashville-based magazine of poetry, The Fugitive. During the summer of 1924, Robert Penn Warren, a Todd County neighbor, introduced her to Allen Tate. Within a year they were married and living in New York City, where their daughter, Nancy Meriwether was born. With Tate, she began a period of life abroad, devoted to writing and sustained by various fellowships granted to one or the other. In London, Gordon was secretary to the influential British writer Ford Madox. In 1930 the Tates returned to the United States and settled in Clarksville in a house provided by Tate's brother Ben and called "Benfolly." Both Tates were exceptionally hospitable to friends and encouraging to younger writers. Both were prolific correspondents, generous with constructive criticism. (Gordon eventually became mentor to several writers, most notably Flannery O'Connor). Although she had to wrest time for her writing from domestic and social obligations, the eight Benfolly years were especially productive for Gordon, who published four novels and several stories before 1937. The first novel was Penhally (1931), followed by Alec Maury, Sportsman (1934), None Shall Look Back (1937), and The Garden of Adonis (1937), studies of the southern family during the Civil War and Great Depression. Academic appointments of the 1940s took the Tates throughout the Southeast and to Princeton, where they established a home near their daughter, who married psychiatrist Percy Wood in 1944. During this time Gordon published her fifth novel, Green Centuries (1941). Her second related group of novels, The Woman on the Porch (1944), which deals with a troubled marriage, The Strange Children (1951), based on life at Benfolly, and The Malefactors (1956), is informed by her conversion to Roman Catholicism. She and her husband wrote The House of Fiction (1950), which was followed by Gordon's How to Read a Novel in 1957. Gordon lived in Princeton until 1973, teaching, and writing: The Glory of Hera (1972). An appointment in the creative writing program drew her to the University of Dallas (Gordon was 77 years old when she proposed the new creative writing program at UD). When her health began to fail in 1978, she moved to San Cristobal de las Casas in Chapas, Mexico, with her daughter and family. She died there on April 11, 1981.
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION Caroline Gordon (1895-1981) was an American author. This collection consists of manuscripts of Gordon's work, including novels, lectures, and poetry during her time at the University of Dallas. It also includes correspondence with authors and family members, writings of others, and photographs.
Lectures and Commentary available here: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14026/2548University of Dalla
A Black Letter Volume from the Home of the Roman Letter: a Venetian Missale Romanum of 1597 - a case study of the Archer copy
The role english plays in the construction of professional identities in nest-nnes bilingual marriages in İstanbul
Caroline Fell Kurban (MEF Author)…WOS:000389065100011Book Citation Index- Social Sciences and HumanitiesArticle; Book ChapterOcakYÖK - 2014-1
HUBUNGAN ANTARA RELIGIOSITAS DENGAN KEBAHAGIAAN PADA BIARAWATI
HUBUNGAN ANTARA RELIGIOSITAS DENGAN KEBAHAGIAAN
PADA BIARAWATI
Jeaned Caroline Wemben Barry
([email protected])
Ahmad
([email protected])
Kurniati Zainuddin
([email protected])
Fakultas Psikologi, Universitas Negeri Makassar
Jl. AP. Pettarani Makassar, 90222
ABSTRAK
Jeaned Caroline Wemben Barry, Ahmad, Kurniati Zainuddin. 2016. Hubungan antara religiositas dengan kebahagiaan pada biarawati.
Kebahagiaan merupakan salah satu hal yang diinginkan setiap individu dalam kehidupan. Salah satu faktor yang memengaruhi kebahagiaan adalah religiositas. Tujuan penelitian ini adalah untuk mengetahui hubungan antara religiositas dengan kebahagiaan. Subjek penelitian ini sebanyak 50 orang biarawati yang terdapat di kota Makassar, yakni 9 orang dalam tingkatan aspiran, 11 orang dalam tingkatan novice, 15 orang dalam tingkatan junior dan 15 orang dalam tingkatan kaul kekal. Metode penelitian yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini adalah metode kuantitatif. Data penelitian diperoleh dengan menggunakan skala, yaitu skala religiositas dengan skala kebahagiaan, dianalisis menggunakan teknik korelasi Spearman. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa terdapat hubungan positif antara religiositas dengan kebahagiaan pada biarawati. Penelitian ini menggambarkan bahwa tingkat religiositas yang tinggi dapat menimbulkan kebahagiaan pada biarawati, (p=0,000, r=0,567, R-Square=0,321). Penelitian ini bermanfaat bagi biarawati untuk menambah kegiatan keagamaan dan menjalin hubungan sosial di biara yang dapat miningkatkan kebahagiaan, sehingga biarawati dapat bertahan hidup di biara.
Kata Kunci : Religiositas, kebahagiaan, biarawat
Serbia: “Better on Facebook Than in the Streets”
The new school year in Serbia is about to start, and Serbian daily newspapers and journals publish numerous articles on the bad effects of the most popular social network1, Facebook, frightening both parents and young people with negative and techno anti-utopian statements. A survey2 on the usage of Facebook among the youth in Serbia has been published recently, too, however, and its results suggest that things aren't really that bad.
Having in mind such an environment, the online public sphere created on the networking sites is no different, and the problems are magnified. There are numerous places where young people in Serbia spend their time online, and one of the most popular ones is Facebook
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