24,512 research outputs found
David Collins and Janine Reeves in a Joint Recital
This is the program for the joint recital of junior trumpetist David Collins and sophomore pianist Janine Reeves. Pianist William Trantham assisted Collins. The recital took place on February 5, 1982, in the Mabee Fine Arts Center Recital Hall
David Collins and Brett Perry in a Joint Recital
This is the program for the joint recital of senior composter David Collins and junior percussionist and senior composer Brett Perry. Mr. Collins was assisted by the OBU Brass Choir, the OBU Percussion Ensemble, and the OBU Flute Ensemble. Mr. Perry was assisted by Jamie Fowler, Paula McKinley, Kimberly Wright, Dan Beard, Carlos Ichter, Lori Reeves, Janine Reeves. Both Mr. Collins and Mr. Perry were assisted by the OBU Band. This recital took place on April 4, 1983, in the Mabee Fine Arts Auditorium
Nicolás Collins, electrónica propulsada por trombón (Estados Unidos)
Concierto interpretado por el músico neoyorquino Nicolás Collins. Desde principios de los años setenta, Collins compone y realiza conciertos. Estudió composición con Alvin Lucier en la Wesleyan University y trabajó durante varios años con David Tudor. Es pionero en el uso de microcomputadores en tiempo real y ha utilizado en su música circuitos electrónicos de fabricación propia, radio, material sonoro encontrado, e instrumentos tradicionales transformados electrónicamente. En sus trabajos más recientes le da mucha importancia a la voz hablada y combina su muy personal uso de la electrónica con instrumentos acústicos convencionales
Morris, David & Collins (512b26)
From left to right, Fred Morris (Company Officer), nurse, Robert David, and Paul Collins. One black and white photograph
Morris Collins, David Bowen
Dr. Morris Collins and David Bowen are shown with an unidentified woman in the library.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/4823/thumbnail.jp
Crime and subversion in the later fiction of Wilkie Collins
Although some good work on Collins is now beginning to emerge, complex and central elements in his fiction require fuller exploration. More consideration is due to the development of Collins's thinking and fictional techniques in the lesser-known novels, since out of a total of thirty-four published works most have received scant attention from scholars. This is particularly true of the later fiction. It is to work of the later period (1870-1889) that I devote the fullest consideration, whilst giving due
attention to the novels of the 1860s which are usually regarded as Collins's major novels.
Collins perceived that established discourses on criminality, deviance, femininity and morality functioned as mechanisms with which the dominant masculine and middle-class hegemony attempted to confirm and maintain its power. His later fiction reveals the anxieties of masculine and middle-class narrator-figures. In his novels written in the 1860s Collins explored narrative and subnarrative. He developed the technique of using the accounts of various characters to challenge the perspective of the narrator-figure and created the persona of an omniscient narrator whose response to his creations reveals his own anxieties.
The novels of Collins's later period develop such techniques to explore masculine apprehension at the changes occurring in late-Victorian society in which women and the working-classes were gaining greater freedom and middle-class dominance was threatened. Although narrators overtly argue the validity of standard discourses, their views are subverted by a level of sub-textual meaning at which the inadequacy of the narrators and their ideologies is revealed. Sub-textual meaning in the novels reveals
tensions and anomalies within ideas of criminality, the Victorian ideal of womanhood, medical discourses and the idea of the gentleman and his counterpart, the knight errant figure. Collins's later fiction presents itself as an impressive attempt to explore the ideological and social tensions of rapidly changing late-Victorian England
Dr. David Collins with Two Students
Kalamazoo College professor of romance languages and literature David Collins, with two students. The students are not identified
Isaac Collins to John Kean, September 29, 1785
Isaac Collins wrote from Trenton to John Kean, addressed to Congress, New York, NY. He wrote that James Mott ould be the proper person to convey the money David Ramsay sent him.https://digitalcommons.kean.edu/lhc_1780s/1121/thumbnail.jp
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