3,841 research outputs found
La tradition musicale des Franco-Acadiens deTerre-Neuve: une etude descriptive
Gary R. Butler surveys French-language traditional music in Newfoundland. Based on his field research of 1979-85, Butler's report focuses on repertoires and performing contexts of outstanding singers and instrumentalists
The Multiplex: The Modern American Motion Picture Theatre as Message
Gary Edgerton\u27s contribution to Hark, Ina R. Exhibition, the Film Reader. London: Routledge, 2001
"Folksong Performance in French-Newfoundland Culture: A Re-Examination of Public and Private Dimensions of Expression"
Gary R. Butler est spécialiste en Vétude du folklore francoterreneuvien, et son article porte su rune chanteuse traditionelle du village de Cap-St-Georges, Mme Josephine Costard [1904-1982]. Il examine certaines des dimensions “performatrices,” sociales, et contextuelles de la tradition musicale franco-terreneuvienne afin de dmontrer les fonctions culturelles et personelles qui lient lindividu à sa création. Finalement, il reprend le modèle “public-private” proposé par plusieurs folklorist es at lapplique à un cas précis de performance
The Murrow Legend as Metaphor: The Creation, Appropriation, and Usefulness of Edward R. Murrow\u27s Life Story
Gary Edgerton\u27s contribution to the Journal of American Culture, Vol. 15
Michel Foucault and Judith Butler: troubling Butler's appropriation of Foucault's work
One of the main influences on Judith Butler‘s thinking has been the work of Michel Foucault. Although this relationship is often commented on, it is rarely discussed in any detail. My thesis makes a contribution in this area. It presents an analysis of Foucault‘s work with the aim of countering Butler‘s representation of his thinking. In the first part of the thesis, I show how Butler initially interprets Foucault‘s project through Nietzschean genealogy, psychoanalysis and Derridean discourse, and how she later develops this interpretation in line with the progress of her own project. In the main part of the thesis, I present an analysis of Foucault‘s thinking in the period from The Archaeology of Knowledge (1969) to The History of Sexuality volume 1 (1976). This analysis focuses on the aspect of his work which has most influenced Butler‘s thinking: namely the notion of a relationship between knowledge, discourse and power. The other issues in his work which Butler addresses—genealogy, the subject, the body, abnormality, and sexuality—are discussed within this framework. I show how, in the early 1970s, Foucault develops the notion of power-knowledge, and sets out a relationship between power-knowledge and discourse which is overlooked by Butler. I argue that Butler interprets Foucaultian power through the notions of repression and social norms, and ignores the concepts of technology and strategy which form a key part of Foucault‘s thinking. I show how, from The Archaeology of Knowledge on, Foucault develops a socio-historical ontology and a genealogy of the subject, both of which are at variance with Butler‘s interpretation of his thinking
Chalk, Talk, and Videotape: Utilizing Ken Burns’s Television Histories in the Classroom
Gary Edgerton\u27s contribution to OAH Magazine of History (Summer 2002) 16 (4): 16-22
Gift Of Love, The | 10-96300
The Gift of Love
Part Number: 10-96300
Price: $1.75
Voicing: SATB
Lyrics By: Margaret Peterson
Music By: James Q. Mulholland
with Oboe
Commissioned by the Master Singers of Eau Claire, WIDr. Gary R. Schwartzkoff, Directorhttps://digitalcommons.butler.edu/jca_scores/1137/thumbnail.jp
Mood disorders in familial epilepsy: A test of shared etiology
Objective: Mood disorders are the most common comorbid conditions in epilepsy but the cause remains unclear. One possible explanation is a shared genetic susceptibility to epilepsy and mood disorders. We tested this hypothesis by evaluating lifetime prevalence of mood disorders in relatives with and without epilepsy in families containing multiple individuals with epilepsy, and comparing the findings with rates from a general population sample.
Methods: The Composite International Diagnostic Interview was administered to 192 individuals from 60 families, including 110 participants with epilepsy of unknown cause (50 focal epilepsy [FE], 42 generalized epilepsy [GE], 6 FE and GE, 12 unclassifiable) and 82 relatives without epilepsy (RWOE). Odds ratios (ORs) for lifetime prevalence of mood disorders in participants with versus without epilepsy were computed through logistic regression, using generalized estimation equations to account for familial clustering. Standardized prevalence ratios (SPRs) were used to compare prevalence in family members with general population rates.
Results: Compared with RWOE, ORs for mood disorders were significantly increased in participants with FE (OR = 2.4, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.1 - 5.2) but not in those with GE (OR = 1.0, 95% CI = 0.4 - 2.2). In addition, prevalence of mood disorders was increased in individuals with epilepsy who had ≥1 relative with FE. Compared with general population rates, mood disorders were significantly increased in individuals with FE but not in those with GE. Rates were also increased in RWOE, but not significantly so (SPR = 1.4, P = 0.14).
Significance: These findings are consistent with the hypothesis of shared genetic susceptibility to epilepsy and mood disorders, but suggest (1) the effect may be restricted to FE, and (2) the shared genetic effect on risk of mood disorders and epilepsy may be restricted to individuals with epilepsy, that is, to those in whom the genetic risk for epilepsy is “penetrant.”Peer reviewedThis is the accepted version of the following article: Insel BJ, Ottman R, Heiman GA. Mood disorders in familial epilepsy: A test of shared etiology. Epilepsia. 2018;00:1–9. https://doi.org/10.1111/epi.13985, which has been published in the Early View form at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/epi.13985/full. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with the Wiley Self-Archiving Policy [https://authorservices.wiley.com/author-resources/Journal-Authors/licensing-open-access/open-access/self-archiving.html]
Rhosymedre | 41-96740
Rhosymedre (Welsh for Lovely )
Part Number: 41-96740
Price: $1.85
Voicing: TTBB
Lyrics By: Based on Robert Burns
Music By: Melody by J.D. Edwards (1805-1885) Adapted by Ralph Vaughan Williams
Arranged By: James Q. Mulholland
with Four-Hand Piano
Featured at: 2014 Rodney Eichenberger Conductor\u27s Clinic
Written for and dedicated to The Singing Statesmen,Gary R. Schwartzhoff, conductorhttps://digitalcommons.butler.edu/jca_scores/1234/thumbnail.jp
Gas volume fraction and velocity profiles: vertical and inclined bubbly air-water flows
Upward inclined gas-liquid flows are frequently encountered in the oil industry and data relating to the local gas volume fraction distribution and the local gas velocity distribution is important, for example, in pressure gradient prediction and in modeling oil well 'blowouts'. In this paper measurements are presented of the local gas volume fraction distribution and the local axial gas velocity distribution which were taken in bubbly air-water flows in an 80 mm diameter pipe which was inclined at angles of 0°, 15° and 30° to the vertical. Qualitative arguments are presented to explain the influence of the liquid superficial velocity on the local gas volume fraction distribution in inclined flow and also to explain the very high axial gas velocities observed towards the upper side of the inclined pipe
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