5,005 research outputs found
Open WIN Ambassadors: Call notes and documentation drafts
Call notes, documentation and comms created by the Open WIN Ambassadors, Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, University of Oxford.
Please refer to the GitLab repository for most up-to-date materials and contributions: https://git.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/open-science/community/open-win-ambassadors
This version issued at the end of the 2021-2022 cohort.
Author Contributions (credit):
Conceptualization: Stuart Clare, Cassandra D. Gould van Praag, Clare E. Mackay.
Data curation: Cassandra D. Gould van Praag.
Formal analysis: Cassandra D. Gould van Praag.
Funding acquisition: Stuart Clare, Clare E. Mackay.
Investigation: Cassandra D. Gould van Praag.
Methodology: Stuart Clare, Cassandra D. Gould van Praag, Clare E. Mackay.
Project administration: Stuart Clare, Dejan Draschkow, Yingshi Feng, Cassandra Gould van Praag, Clare E. Mackay, Verena Sarrazin, Bernd Taschler.
Resources: Dejan Draschkow, Yingshi Feng, Cassandra Gould van Praag, Verena Sarrazin, Bernd Taschler.
Software: Dejan Draschkow, Yingshi Feng, Cassandra Gould van Praag, Verena Sarrazin, Bernd Taschler.
Supervision: Stuart Clare, Cassandra D. Gould van Praag, Clare E. Mackay.
Visualization: Dejan Draschkow, Yingshi Feng, Cassandra Gould van Praag, Verena Sarrazin, Bernd Taschler.
Writing - original draft: Dejan Draschkow, Yingshi Feng, Cassandra Gould van Praag, Verena Sarrazin, Bernd Taschler.
Writing - review & editing: Dejan Draschkow, Yingshi Feng, Cassandra Gould van Praag, Verena Sarrazin, Bernd Taschler
Tennessee roads / Jesse Stuart. In Mountain herald / Lincoln Memorial University.
This picturesque poem was written by then-sophomore (and future celebrated author) Jesse Stuart about the roads of Tennessee
Clare Barker y Stuart Murray (eds.) (2018): The Cambridge companion to Literature and Disability. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press
Reseña de la obra 'The Cambridge companion to Literature and Disability' (2018) de Clare Barker y Stuart Murray (eds.)
No. 617 Stuart Ruckman
Transcript (12, 40 pages) of two interviews by Matt Driscoll with Stuart Ruckman on April 9, 2010, and July 7, 2011Ruckman (b. 1966) was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. Stuart shares how his family, particularly his father, played a significant role in introducing him to the outdoors. Some of his initial explorations included a hike to the top of Mount Olympus when he was five years old, backpacking trips in the Wasatch and Uinta Mountains, and a successful summit attempt on the Grand Teton when he was twelve. Stuart discovered technical rock climbing due to the influence of his older brother Bret, five years Stuart\u27s senior. Bret learned under Dennis Turville, a well-respected Salt Lake climbing instructor. Stuart shares his observations on the Salt Lake climbing community of the late 1970s and 1980s, noting the intimacy of the community, while also pointing out the significant influence of a handful of climbers, including Merrill Bitter, Les Ellison, and Brian Smoot. He briefly describes the proliferation of new-route development in the Wasatch during his first decade in climbing. In collaboration with his brother Bret, Stuart published comprehensive guidebooks on climbing in the Wasatch Mountains. Stuart\u27s contributions as a first-ascensionist and co-author of Rock Climbing the Wasatch Range attest to his lasting impact on Utah climbing. Interview is part of the Outdoor Recreation History Project. Interviewer: Matt Driscol
A global study of diurnal warming
EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
The life and works of Osbert of Clare
Osbert of Clare was an English monastic writer, whose works extended from
the mid-1120s to the mid-1150s. His Latin hagiography reflects a deep admiration for
Anglo-Saxon saints and spirituality, while his letters provide a personal perspective
on his turbulent career. As prior of Westminster Abbey, Osbert of Clare worked to
strengthen the rights and prestige of his monastery. His production of forged or
altered charters makes him one of England's most prolific medieval forgers. At times
his passion for reform put him at odds with his abbots, and he was sent into exile
under both Abbot Herbert (1121-c.1136) and Abbot Gervase (1138-c.1157). Also
Osbert, as one of the first proponents of the Immaculate Conception of Mary, wrote
about the feast, worked to legitimize its celebration, and provided us with the only
significant narration of its introduction to England.
This thesis is divided into two sections. The first section is principally
historical and the second is principally literary. In the first section, I provide an
overview of Osbert of Clare's career and examine in greater detail two of his most
significant undertaking: his promotion of Westminster Abbey and his attempted
canonization of Edward the Confessor. In the second section, I give a philological
study of Osbert Latin style and examine themes that nm throughout his writings, such
as virginity, exile and kingship. Osbert's promotion of the feast of the Immaculate
Conception is included in the second section of the thesis because of its ties to the
themes of virginity and femininity within his writings. There are also two appendices:
the first is a survey of the extant manuscripts of Osbert's writings, and the second is
an edition of Osbert's unpublished Life of St Ethelbert from Gotha,
Forschungsbibliothek MS Memb. i. 8l
Media release
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Media release
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tag=24 data=PLANNING, LANDS & ENVIRONMENT%ETHNIC AFFAIRS%ARTS%HERITAGE, MUSEUMS%CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
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George MacLeod’s open-air preaching: performance and counter-performance
Stuart Blythe uses the methodology of performance to analyse George MacLeod’s open-air preaching. He points out that MacLeod’s preaching was derived from a theology of the incarnation, and an understanding of the paradoxes and dichotomies of common human life. This preaching, Blythe suggests, was also a counter-performance in the context of outlooks and ideologies inimical to the gospel. The paper raises interesting issues related to preaching as performance, and the further question as to whether or not the life and work of the Church as a whole might now be better understood as a counter-performance.Publisher PD
The Life and Letters of the Lady Arbella Stuart
Lady Arbella Stuart, a woman nearly forgotten in history and literature and yet a woman who lived a full and exciting life which is well documented in her letters to her family, friends and royalty (both Queen Elizabeth I and James VI and I). Arbella Stuart was born in 1575 to Elizabeth Cavendish and Charles Darnley and was brought up by her maternal grandmother, Bess of Hardwick. She was educated from birth about her proximity to the throne (there was a chance she could have been queen when Elizabeth died) and the important role she had in life. There have been several biographies written about Stuart over the years and most recently an excellent text of her existing letters by Sara Jayne Steen which is the primary source of information for this thesis. This thesis examines Stuart’s tone, rhetoric and style in a selection of letters written over the course of her life, where possible using manuscripts viewed in the British Library and Hardwick Hall, as well as the published text. Part of what makes Stuart such an interesting subject is her ability to manipulate her reader and assume different personae, depending on whom she was writing to. The young Stuart writes passionately and often without thinking first, putting her thoughts on paper and then quickly sending them off to the Queen and her advisers. An older and wiser Stuart writes from James VI and I’s court and is very formal in her letters to the King. She is more relaxed when writing to her Aunt and Uncle and depicts court life in a lively informal fashion giving us a valuable insight into what life as a courtier would have been like at this time. Finally the thesis examines Stuart’s last letters written from imprisonment, the work of a desperate woman, fighting for her freedom. Stuart, like most of us, had a multi-faceted personality. She was at times an apparently submissive and subservient subject of the King; a well read and educated woman who adopted the guise of humility and deference to those in authority, the patriarchal order in place. This thesis will depict the many different sides to Stuart and give a brief overview of her exciting and turbulent life, told through her letters
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