2,619 research outputs found
Interview with Jacqueline DeGroot
Jacqueline DeGroot, author of Climax and Worth Any Price, discusses how she came to be a writer, her writing process and sources of inspiration, and her experiences with self-publishing
A Symposium of Reviews oF Public Criminology?: By Ian Loader and Richard Sparks (Oxford: Key Ideas in Criminology, Routledge, 2010, 196pp.) with contributions from Nils Christie, Elliott Currie, Helena Kennedy, Gloria Laycock, Rod Morgan, Joe Sim, Jacqueline Tombs and Reece Walters
A Symposium of Reviews oF Public Criminology?: By Ian Loader and Richard Sparks (Oxford: Key Ideas in Criminology, Routledge, 2010, 196pp.) with contributions from Nils Christie, Elliott Currie, Helena Kennedy, Gloria Laycock, Rod Morgan, Joe Sim, Jacqueline Tombs and Reece Walter
Jacqueline Woodson: 2023 Irma Black Award Silver Medal Acceptance Speech
Author Jacqueline Woodson gives an acceptance speech for The World Belonged to Us, illustrated by Leo Espinosa (Penguin)https://educate.bankstreet.edu/irma_black_awards/1011/thumbnail.jp
Leslie Behm interviews essayist and fantasy writer Jacqueline Carey
Essayist and fantasy writer Jacqueline Carey talks about the meaning of the title of her Kushiel Trilogy, how she became an author, her work in progress. She also gives advice to aspiring authors. Carey is interviewed by Michigan State University librarian Leslie Behm. Part of the MSU Libraries' Michigan Writers Series. Held in the MSU Main Library
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Jacqueline Barnitz: 40 Years of Publications
Jacqueline Barnitz: 40 Years of Publications
Jacqueline Barnitz is responsible for establishing modern Latin American art as an area of concentration
within art history at the University of Texas at Austin, where she has taught now for 25 years. She's a
major reason why UT Austin is known as the best place in the nation for studying modern Latin American
art. A notable record of publication accompanies her career as a distinguished educator. In fact, her
interest in Latin American art goes back to her tenure as an art critic in New York for the periodicals Art
Voices (1964-1965) and Arts Magazine (1964-1975). Additionally, she's been the curator of numerous art
exhibitions and, subsequently, the author of many exhibition catalogs. In 2000 UT Press published her
much-anticipated and seminal book Twentieth-Century Art of Latin America, which quickly became the
textbook on the subject. We present this display of selected publications as a tribute to her outstanding
contributions to the university and to the field of art history.UT Librarie
Wooden Supports in 12th-16th-Century European Paintings. A New English Translation with Commentary of Jacqueline Marette’s Connaissance des Primitifs par l’étude du bois du XIIe au XVIe siecle (1961)
This ebook is a new English translation with commentary of Jacqueline Marette's seminal 'Connaissance des Primitifs par l'étude du bois du XIIe au XVIe siècle' (1961). The book is designed to increase specialised understanding of the complex issues of the structural conservation of panel paintings and indirectly to advance best practice for the treatment of these works in collections around the world. As well as rendering Marette’s inestimable work available to the English-speaking world, this on-line edition provides notes and references to the most recent literature in the field, together with illustrations and line drawings of joinery, assembly techniques, tools, etc
A Symposium of Reviews oF Public Criminology?: By Ian Loader and Richard Sparks (Oxford: Key Ideas in Criminology, Routledge, 2010, 196pp.) with contributions from Nils Christie, Elliott Currie, Helena Kennedy, Gloria Laycock, Rod Morgan, Joe Sim, Jacqueline Tombs and Reece Walters
A Symposium of Reviews oF Public Criminology?: By Ian Loader and Richard Sparks (Oxford: Key Ideas in Criminology, Routledge, 2010, 196pp.) with contributions from Nils Christie, Elliott Currie, Helena Kennedy, Gloria Laycock, Rod Morgan, Joe Sim, Jacqueline Tombs and Reece Walter
First person – Jacqueline Weidner
First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Biology Open (BiO), helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Jacqueline Weidner is first author on ‘Hormones as adaptive control systems in juvenile fish’, published in BiO. Jacqueline conducted the research described in this article while a PhD student at the University of Bergen, Norway. She is now an assistant professor at the Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway, investigating sexual selection and modelling of evolutionary patterns
Jacqueline Risset. Scritture dell’istante
“Born on 25th May 1936. Two specific desires: not to become an adult, and to write”. Jacqueline Risset (1936-2014) was a translator from French (Ponge, Sollers, the Tel Quel poets) and Italian (Dante, Machiavelli, Balestrini), as well as a well-known scholar for her work on Scève, Proust and Bataille. The aim of this volume is to analyse Risset’s poetic work, from the beginnings with textual writing in the experimentalism of Tel Quel, through a trajectory that, crossing Dante and Stilnovism through the translation of the Divine Comedy, led the author to the elaboration of a poetics centred on “privileged instants” that open “to the elsewhere”
Dialogue of the Western World 2: Antigone, April 25, 1972
Dialogue of the Western World 2: Antigone, April 25, 1972. With an introduction by Greg Otto, the host (Dr. Robert Goldwin) discusses "Antigone" with author Jacqueline Wheldon and three students from St. John's College, Joanne Morris, Christine Constantine, and Michael Jordan
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