929 research outputs found
Agia marina and Peristereònas: two new epipalaeolithic sites on the Island of Lemnos (Greece)
The surveys carried out along the coasts of the island of Lemnos (Greece) have led to the discovery of new Late Epipalaeolithic sites at Agia Marina and Peristereonas. Peristereonas yielded a knapped stone assemblage that is strictly comparable with that from Ouriakos, a site located along the south-eastern coast of the same island, while the artefacts from Agia Marina are more problematic to interpret because they are probably to be attributed to a slightly different period. However, the most characteristic artefacts recovered from the sites are represented by microlithic geometrics obtained by abrupt, bipolar, or direct retouch, end scrapers, and different types of exhausted cores and technical pieces, which help us reconstruct the operational sequence employed for the manufacture of the armatures. The aim of the paper is to contribute to the interpretation of the characteristics of the Late Epipalaeolithic assemblages discovered on the island and to frame them into the general picture of the end of the Pleistocene in this part of the Aegean. The artefacts from the sites show unique characteristics, without parallels to the knapped stone assemblages of the same period so far recovered along the coasts of the Aegean Sea, the eastern Mediterranean, the Levant, and the Black Sea.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Agia Marina and Peristereònas: Two New Epipalaeolithic Sites on the Island of Lemnos (Greece)
The surveys carried out along the coasts of the Island of Lemnos (Greece) have led to the discovery
of new Late Epipalaeolithic sites at Agia Marina and Peristereònas. Peristereònas yielded a knapped
stone assemblage which is strictly comparable with that from Ouriakos, a site located along the
south-eastern coast of the same island, while the artefacts from Agia Marina are more problematic
to interpret, because they are probably to be attributed to a slightly different chronological period.
However, the most characteristic artefacts recovered from the sites are represented by microlithic
geometrics obtained by abrupt, bipolar or direct retouch, end scrapers, and different types of
exhausted cores and technical pieces, which help us reconstruct the operative chain employed for
the manufacture of the armatures. The scope of the paper is to contribute to the interpretation of the
characteristics of the Late Epipalaeolithic assemblages discovered in the island, and to frame them
into the general picture of the end of the Pleistocene period in this part of the Aegean. The artefacts
from the sites show some unique characteristics, which do not find parallels in the knapped stone
assemblages of the same period so far recovered along the coasts of the Aegean Sea, the eastern
Mediterranean and the Levan
Interview with Andrew Anastasia, Class of 2006
Oral history interview with Dr. Andrew Anastasia, Class of 2006. The interview was conducted on July 12, 2023 by Rexton Jones, then a student employee at Milner Library.
Anastasia reflects on his upbringing in the southern suburbs of Chicagoland. He characterizes his hometown as being fraught with racial tensions and toxic white supremacy dynamics. Anastasia shares his early passion for music, which initially led him to pursue a degree in music performance and conducting. Anastasia auditioned at several Illinois universities, and although ISU wasn\u27t his first choice, he acknowledges the pivotal role it would come to play in shaping his academic and personal journey.
As a student, Anastasia was a member of marching band, PRIDE, and Women\u27s Coalition (later renamed Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance, now FLAME; Feminist-Led Activist Movement to Empower). He recounts organizing an event called Rush to the Left with author David Foster Wallace, as well as iterations of Take Back the Night and the Clotheslines Project. Anastasia also highlights the support he received from faculty and staff like Mark Vegter, Barb Dallinger, Tom Gerschick, and Alison Bailey, who encouraged him to persist in his studies despite setbacks.
Between his parents’ divorce, mother’s declining mental health, and own struggles with gender and sexuality, Anastasia had difficulty maintaining his grades and failed out of school twice. After leaving ISU in 1998 he took a job at an agency that provided support for clients with developmental disabilities. Anastasia also worked as a 911 dispatcher for McLean Count for a time and volunteered with local organizations such as The Baby Fold.
Anastasia eventually returned to higher education at Heartland Community College. There, a faculty member encouraged him to finish his bachelor’s degree at ISU after earning his associate’s at HCC. Anastasia wrote an appeals letter and was readmitted. During this final stint at the university he participated in multiple student research exhibitions and had his senior capstone project profiled in Newsweek magazine.
After graduation Anastasia elected to pursue a master’s degree and PhD in English at the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee. Initially drawn to transgender studies and queer theory, Anastasia\u27s focus shifted to teaching once he discovered a passion for it due to his graduate assistantship. His research interests encompass trauma, adverse childhood experiences, and their impact on learning in composition studies.https://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/aoh/1056/thumbnail.jp
Anastasia candre... tɨinide, fia jagɨyɨna ite: does not die, will last as the wind
Tribute to Anastasia Candre. The author recalls some anecdotes about Anastasia’s experience in Universidad Nacional de Colombia and in Leticia.Homenaje a Anastasia Candre. El autor recuerda algunas anécdotas de la experiencia de Anastasia en la Universidad Nacional de Colombia y en Leticia
Perioperative Goal-Setting Consultations by Surgical Colleagues: A New Model for Supporting Patients, Families, and Surgeons in Shared Decision Making
Patients with postoperative complications are often subjected to prolonged life-sustaining treatment based on erroneous assumptions about their goals of care. Shared decision making is an evidence-based approach that helps ensure patients’ wishes and values are honored in their course of treatment. Perioperative palliative care can help create goal-concordant trajectories of care for high risk, seriously ill, or complicated patients, through sophisticated prognostication, higher-level communication, and recommendations based on the best available evidence and patients’ stated goals and priorities. Here, we present a surgeon-to-surgeon consultative model that surmounts many barriers to perioperative palliative care consultation and, as illustrated in the cases presented herein, offers profound and unique benefits for patients, families, and surgeons alike. While the support of a surgical colleague with palliative care skills can be helpful postoperatively in the setting of unanticipated outcomes or prolonged recovery, it is particularly beneficial when accessed preoperatively for the purposes of goal-concordant decision making and advance care planning. We encourage both individuals and professional societies to develop and expand the niche for surgeons interested in assisting with goal setting and shared decision making for patients on a consultative basis, particularly in the preoperative period
ANASTASIA PAPARIS Dipl., MSc, M.Phil., PhD, PORTFOLIO (Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Urban Design & Town Planning)
The document presents the major part of the academic and professional work of ARCHI.POLIS (former EUROPOLIS) consultancy established and managed by Dr Anastasia Paparis, with offices in Thessaloniki and Veroia, Central Macedonia, GREECE. It comprises lectures and academic teaching, the content of the M. Phil and PhD reseach in UK and Greece, publications in scientific magazines and the press, proceedings in conferences, congresses and symposiums, chapters in books, projects of architectural, urban design and town planning scales, research projects, presentations, exhibitions, awards, scientific citations etc. The PhD has been re-paginated with the visual material next to the relevant text and published in the form of a DVD (self-published, upon request). Contact: [email protected], [email protected] file, together with other professional and academic material, have been stolen from a USB in the author's bag, inside the Architects' Department Librabry, Aristoteleion University of Thessaloniki. The author welcomes any information about the malefactor, especially when detecting material referring in this source, also published by another author. Contact: [email protected], [email protected]
The Prose of Anastasia I. Tsvetaeva: Autobiographical Mythmaking
Anastasia Tsvetayeva’s literary work can be largely defined as autobiographical. Her first pen probe, “Royal reflections,” is a philosophical essay where the author represents herself as a “theomachist” and the debunker of all moral values. Later, Tsvetaeva ventured into the genre of autobiographical novel, yet her novel may be called “autobiographical” only with some reservations. On the one hand, this work reflects real facts of the author’s life. On the other, the narrator, at some points, deliberately departs from truth, obscures and alters the facts, pursuing specific aims. The elements of autobiographical mythmak- ing may be found in the Memoirs of Anastasia Tsvetayeva that would be worthwhile to compare with the autobiographical prose of her elder sister Marina
"Making the dignity of our labor a reality": household workers organizing in New York City, 1960-1980
This thesis investigates the local movement of household workers in New York from 1960-1980. Adding to labor and feminist histories that challenge the notion of domestic workers as “unorganizable,” this thesis provides an account of the Household Technicians of New York, an organization created and run by working-class Black women in New York. These women fought to gain decent pay and benefits for their labor, and dignity and respect as household workers. With the use of meeting notes, recordings, correspondences, and publications, as well as secondary sources, this thesis examines the vision of the Household Technicians of New York, within the context of the larger national movement of household workers in the 1960s and 1970s. This study pays particular attention to tensions within the movement of household workers and to the efforts to find allies, two topics which have yet to be fully explored in previous scholarly literature on domestic worker organizing. This thesis finds that the Household Technicians of New York saw an alliance with women’s movement, largely middle class white women, as central to redefining household work. At the same time, the larger women’s movement was trying to find ways to get women out of the household all together. Rather than focus on the civil rights movement or labor movement, household workers made a strategic choice to focus on the women’s movement. Through this alliance, they hoped to create a coalition of household workers and employers. While the women’s movement did have brief moments when it worked with household workers, ultimately, white feminists were unable to see Black household workers as a part of their vision for liberation.M.A.Includes bibliographical referencesby Anastasia Hardi
UCF Faculty Author Series: Academic Publishing
Please join us as UCF faculty members Anastasia Salter (School of Visual Arts and Design), Blake Scott (Writing & Rhetoric), and Keri Watson (School of Visual Arts and Design) discuss their approaches to successful writing and publishing in an academic environment. The panelists will share their most recent publications and writing experiences, which will be followed by a Q&A session. Light refreshments will be provided
CLIMATE POLICIES AND ADAPTATION MEASURES FOR ALPINE HERITAGE
Climate change represents a significant challenge to the preservation of architectural
heritage; however, the development of pragmatic methodologies for safeguarding
architectural heritage in at-risk areas remains under-investigated. This research
assesses the impact of climate change on Alpine architectural heritage and identifies
practical measures for adaptation. Key research questions include:
1. How is climate change impacting the Alpine region?
2. Are climate policies currently being implemented at the regional level to
mitigate these impacts?
3. Do regional and national climate change adaptation and mitigation plans
adequately address the needs of architectural heritage?
4. What are the primary effects of climate change on Alpine architectural
heritage?
5. What practical measures can protect Alpine heritage to support adaptation
to changing environmental conditions?
The investigation is based on a bibliographic review of key sources and an analysis
of international and national policies, with a particular focus on the Italian context,
highlighting overlapping strategies across various levels and stakeholders. These
overlaps pose challenges to developing a comprehensive protection framework for
the protection of alpine heritage. The study proposes a coordinated strategy spanning
provincial and national levels that corresponds to the architectural scale. The
findings aim to guide future research and decision-making, providing actionable
strategies towards heritage adaptation
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