3,932 research outputs found
Carson, Mary Louise
Mary Louise Carson, LL.B.
Bowling Green, Kentucky
ΑΧΩ
Kentucky Law Journal Staff, ’24; Exchange Editor Kentucky Law Journal, ’25; Mortar Board; Philosophian Literary Critic, ’24; Chairman Civic Department, ’24; President Philosophian Literary Society, ’25; Women’s Administrative Council, ’25; Historian Mortar Board, ’25; Delegate Mortar Board, ’25; Giftorian Senior Class, ’25.
-The Kentuckian, 1925----------------------------------
Mary Louise Carson (November 2, 1894 - April 4, 1979) was born in Warren County, Kentucky to Dr. James Oliver Carson and Margaret Poindexter. Carson graduated from Brenau College (1917) and Western Kentucky State Normal & Teachers College (1915) before attending the University of Kentucky College of Law. Carson received the highest average for the Kentucky bar examination in April 1925. Carson was a homemaker. She married Dr. William Preston Drake in 1926.https://uknowledge.uky.edu/klapp_1925/1003/thumbnail.jp
Estranged lives: the romantic grotesque in Carson McCullers fiction
Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Comunicação e ExpressãoAnálise da função do grotesco no estabelecimento da atmosfera em Reflections in a Golden Eye e The Ballad of the Sad Café, de Carson McCullers, a partir do conceito de grotesco Romântico, de Mikhail Bakhtin. A análise mostra que a falta do poder regenerativo que é característico do grotesco Romântico está presente nas duas obras estudadas, proporcionando-lhes uma atmosfera sombria
Drake, Louise (Carson), 1894-1979 (MSS 536)
Finding aid only for Manuscripts Collection 536. Correspondence, notebooks, family histories, photocopies of wills, deeds, and other genealogical research of Louise (Carson) Drake of Bowling Green, Kentucky. Includes her roster of Revolutionary War soldiers who died in Kentucky
Drake, Louise (Carson), 1894-1979 (SC 3515)
Finding aid and scan (Click on Additional Files below) for Manuscripts Small Collection 3515. “Sesquicentennial Vesper Service Remarks Made by Mrs. W. P. Drake at Pioneer Cemetery, Bowling Green, Kentucky, April 23rd, 1969,” a speech by Louise (Carson) Drake reviewing the early history of the Presbyterian Church in Bowling Green and providing biographical and genealogical data on selected members, including some interred at Pioneer Cemetery
Undersea - Rachel Carson
Originally Published as Rachel Louise Carson (1937). Undersea. Atlantic Monthly, 78:55–6
Letter from Rose Cecil O'Neill to Mary Louise Clifton
A handwritten letter from Rose Cecil O'Neill to Mary Louise Clifton Womer regarding folk art in the Ozarks
From the IBPP Research Associates. Brazil: Louise Madeira
The author -Louise Madeira - is a psychologist working in Brazil. In this article, the Brazilian Economic Crisis is discussed
Payton, Amy Louise. "Looking Back" radio show on Paytons book on Georgina Stirling.
CBC freelance broadcaster Cathy Porter talking to author Amy Louise Payton about the life of Georgina Stirling, Soprano Premadonna from Twillingate. Payton talks about her interest in the singer and her book on Stirling; Hiram Silk interviews Amy Louise Payton on the program Looking Back about her book Nightingale of the North about Georgina Stirling. Payton talks about Stirling and the history of the Twillingate area
Talking to Louise Bourgeois
A narrative text describing a fictive series of events.
The narrator (first person) attempts to interview the celebrated artist Louise Bourgeois in her London studio, and events unfold, leading to his becoming her studio assistant.
The text is interwoven with the narrative of an artist from an unspecified South or Central American country, living in London. There is another text including elements of the first narrative set in a different context, and a further text describing thought processes involved in making a particular painting. The texts serve to problematise the notion of authenticity, identity, originality and the role of the artist. The text is derived from several paintings by the author
Rachel Carson
It is rare for the intrinsic power of distilled prose to span across generations, shaping politics, policy, and perception. Blending conservation ethics, meticulous research and political knowledge into an easily readable prose, Rachel Louise Carson left a legacy through the written word. Criticized for being a single woman in a male-centric field, she established her individuality, her free spirit, and her amazing dedication to her ethics. Carson’s contribution to science lies within her meticulous attention to scientific detail and her ability to communicate complex scientific theories to the general public. Carson portrayed peremptory evidence of the devastating effects of synthetic chemicals and nuclear testing, while simultaneously communicating the role of ecology and environmental change to the general public. Carson challenged agricultural scientists, chemical companies, and the government for their misuse of chemical agents, and their misguided notions of trying to dominate nature. Technology and scientific testing was severely limited and yet Carson was able to draw sound scientific proof of the devastating lasting effects of the human-made chemicals she dubbed “elixirs of death.” Rachel Carson left a legacy through her chosen medium, the written word; inspiring generations of scientific writers to distill complex scientific processes into creative prose to inspire the general public to consider their own role within the environment
- …
