4,809 research outputs found

    SESSION VI -- HOLOCAUST PEDAGOGY

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    CHAIR: Alexandra Kramen, Clark University PANELISTS: Holocaust Education at a German Site of Memory: Site Educators as Mediators of Memory Irene Ann Resenly, University of Wisconsin - MadisonDOWNLOAD PAPER ‘Misleading and inaccurate’: The Auschwitz classroom resources and the politics of Holocaust education in 1980s BritainChad McDonald, University of Bristol, United KingdomDOWNLOAD PAPER Holocaust Memory and its Mediation by Teachers in England and France Heather Mann, Oxford University, United KingdomDOWNLOAD PAPE

    Heather Clark on Sylvia Plath

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    P(l)athography:Plath and Her Biographers

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    Heather Clark reveals the powerful impact of Plath biographers. Splicing the words pathology, biography, and Plath’s name, she coins the term P(l)athographers. Clark helps us to understand their cumulative practice of distortedly mythologizing Plath and misdirecting readers’ interpretations of her writing. For Clark, Plath’s English Tripos exam at Cambridge offers us more understanding of Plath’s poetics than her relationship with her dead father ever could

    Geologic map of the Dufur area, Wasco County, Oregon

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    Report -- Plate 1 -- Plate 2 -- Plate 3.Jason D. McClaughry, Heather H. Herinckx, Clark A. Niewendorp, Carlie J.M. Azzopardi, and Joshua A. Hackett.Title from PDF cover (viewed on May 19, 2021).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English

    A luz da mente: uma resenha de Red Comet: The Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath (2020), de Heather Clark

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    Review of the new biography of the US poet Sulvia Plath, Red Comet: the Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath, written by Heather Clark and publish by Knopf, in 2020.Resenha da nova biografia da poeta estadunidense Sylvia Plath, Red Comet: the Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath, escrita por Heather Clark e publicada pela editora Knopf em 2020

    Harris, Heather (Oral History Interview, 2011)

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    Heather Harris was one of the first group of female students at Saint Mary's in the 1960s. She has been very active in Saint Mary's activities ever since, writing a regular column in the Maroon and White in the 1970s, and being involved in the Saint Mary's Sport Hall of Fame.Main topics include: taking evening classes at SMU in the mid-1060s before the university was officially coeducational; being in the first cohort of female students; alumni activities; Saint Mary's Sport Hall of Fame; the changing context of Halifax as it contributed to University life; priests impressions of the nuns at Mount St. Vincent. Discussed or mentioned: Elizabeth Chard, Kenneth Ozmon, Owen Carrigan, Father Hennessey, Terry Donahoe, David Flemming, Joslyn Grassby, Aileen O'Leary Carroll, Kevin Cleary, Ann MacGillivray, Father Czako, Millie Harrington, Father Devine, Ken Clark; Edmund Morri

    "Not Mrs. Hughes and Mrs. Sillitoe":Sylvia Plath and Ruth Fainlight in the 1960s

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    Heather Clark Sylvia Plath has often been twinned with Anne Sexton, whom she met in Robert Lowell’s 1959 creative writing seminar in Boston, and whose work elicited Plath’s admiration and jealousy. Sexton’s poetry, as many critics have observed, was a major influence on Plath. The poets’ triple martini afternoons at the Boston Ritz are now legend, but according to Sexton herself, she and Plath never became close. The poem “Sylvia’s Death,” Sexton wrote in 1966, “makes everyone think I knew her well, when I only knew her death well” (“The Barfly Ought to Sing” 92) . Less storied but equally important is Plath’s literary friendship with Ruth Fainlight. Like Plath, Fainlight was an American of Eastern European heritage married to a famous writer from the North of England; a devotee of Robert Graves; and a poet who hoped to combine writing and motherhood

    Female candidates are more likely to use Twitter to discuss policy issues and to ‘go negative’ in their campaign.

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    In the 2016 presidential primaries, both female candidates, Hillary Clinton and Carly Fiorina, have made extensive use of Twitter to reach out to female voters. In new research, using data gathered during the 2012 election, Heather Evans and Jennifer Hayes Clark look at how female candidates make use of Twitter. They find that women are much more likely to ‘go negative’ on Twitter, and to use Twitter to discuss policy issues, especially those that affect women the most

    The Times, They Are Changing

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    In 2015, Rutgers became only the second accredited law school in the United States to select the open-source ILS, Koha. The merger of two unique catalogs at Rutgers Law School has presented unique challenges with respect to migration mapping, data recall for large records, and relevancy ranking, all of which affect search results and usability of the OPAC. System migrations always result in some data being lost or incorrectly transferred. The hope is to minimize just how much data is compromised while fixing errors that might not have come to light but for the migration.Peer reviewe

    Combining technology with human resources management to strengthen virtual teams

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    Technology tools that best fit work tasks based on time and geography needs can encourage knowledge sharing, trust building and socialisation. Clark Shah-Nelson and Heather A. Johnson write that these tools, in combination with human resource management policies related to hiring, induction, training, and on-going appraisal practices can improve the performance of virtual teams
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