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UNT Special Collections Artifact Photography
Photograph of the cover of "The Poems of Alice Meynell" by Alice Meynell, held by UNT Special Collections. The faded blue cover contains the title and author in gold lettering at the top, the words "Complete Edition" in gold at the bottom. There are two small stars on the cover
Alice Meynell: Her Literary Ideas and Her Relation to the English Essay
This thesis is offered as a study of Alice Christina Meynell, her literary ideas in regard to prose, and her relation to the English essay. For the most part the illustrations have been selected from material which is available. Several of the quotations are contained in her unpublished works; some other quotations could not be attributed to any author, as they were spoken by Alice Meynell to her intimate friends. This paper was prepared after an examination of the available prose work of Mrs. Meynell and after reading several articles and books and chapters in other books on criticism
Starshine, in C [music] : song /
W.M. & Co.2875 (Publisher number). For voice and piano.; "Introduced ... by Miss Ruth Lincoln in Meynell & Gunn's pantomime Cinderella".; "Sole Australasian agents Stanley Mullen Propy. Ltd." -- cover.; Pl. no.: W.M. & Co. 2875.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an6488642; MUS: N, Snell.Cinderella (Pantomime
My body is my piano.
In this performative keynote presentation, the author explored visibility and the body in relation to performance, sound art and experimental music. The keynote encompassed bits of creative writing, performance, and critical and historical analysis. It featured works by Yoko Ono, Charlotte Moorman, Sanja Ivekovic, Christina Kubisch, Deej Fabyc, Catherine Meynell, Elaine Shemilt, Maria Vedder, Bettina Gruber, Laurie Anderson and Janet Cardiff. During the presentation, the author discussed theoretical approaches by Laura Mulvey, John Berger, Donna Haraway, Paul Preciado, and research by Cathy Lane
A comparative study of E. Underhill's criteria of mysticism and C. G. Jung's theory of individuation
Bibliography: p. 124-127
Scaffold: A causal concept for evolutionary explanations
This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in this recordThe concept of scaffold is widespread in science and increasingly common in evolutionary biology (Chiu and Gilbert 2015; Love and Wimsatt 2019; Black et al. 2020). While this concept figures in causal explanations, it is far from clear what scaffolds are and what role they play in those explanations (Charbonneau 2015). Here we present evolutionary scaffolding explanation as a distinct type of explanatory strategy, distinguishing it from other types of causal explanation in evolutionary biology. By doing so, we clarify the meaning of “scaffold” as a causal concept and its potential contribution to accounts of evolutionary novelty and major transitions.New Frontiers in Research FundGordon and Betty Moore Foundatio
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