3,298 research outputs found

    Ellen MacDonald Ward writes about how the owners of the many bed-and-breakfasts

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    Ellen MacDonald Ward writes about how the owners of the many bed-and-breakfasts (B&Bs) in Searsport, and old seafaring town that has one of the largest concentrations such establisments in Maine, have decorarted their vintage homes.The article features the Hitchborn Inn, owned by Nancy and Bruce Suppes; Linda Farmer\u27s Searsport\u27 Carriage House; George and Edith Johnson\u27s Homeport Inn; the Captain A. V. Nichels Inn, presided over by Bev Buyers, her husband, Brian, and son, Charlie; Brass Lantern Inn, operated by Lee Anne Lee and her sister, Pat Gatto; and Victorian Inn, owned by Ed and Judie Upham

    Painted conversations, exhibition 3: Esther Thorniley-Walker and Ellen Macdonald. [Exhibition]

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    The "Painted Conversations" exhibition series is organised and facilitated by Lyndsey Gilmour and Peter Chalmers, whose collaborative partnership has formed through their roles as lecturers and early-career researchers in the Painting Department at Gray's School of Art, Robert Gordon University. For Gilmour and Chalmers, painting remains elusive; it offers continued moments of revelation and breakthrough, and they share a belief that painting can continue to offer valuable insight into our shared reality. "Painted Conversations" seeks to consider and test the potential of visual dialogues between practitioners in realising these breakthroughs in painting practice. In this third exhibition of the series, the work of Esther Thorniley-Walker and Ellen Macdonald is presented together for the first time. They have focused on a sharing of knowledge by participating in each other's research questions, to test how this can contribute to the advancement and discovery of both individual and shared solutions. The exhibition was displayed 17-22 February 2024 and accompanied by a talk held on the 27 February

    Gender and Organizational Change. Bridging the Gap between Policy and Practice / Mandy MacDonald, Ellen Sprenger, Ireen Dubel

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    Gender and Organizational Change. Bridging the Gap between Policy and Practice / Mandy MacDonald, Ellen Sprenger, Ireen Dube

    Rooted in all its story, more is meant than meets the ear : a study of the relational and revelational nature of George MacDonald's mythopoeic art

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    Scholars and storytellers alike have deemed George MacDonald a great mythopoeic writer, an exemplar of the art. Examination of this accolade by those who first applied it to him proves it profoundly theological: for them a mythopoeic tale was a relational medium through which transformation might occur, transcending boundaries of time and space. The implications challenge much contemporary critical study of MacDonald, for they demand that his literary life and his theological life cannot be divorced if either is to be adequately assessed. Yet they prove consistent with the critical methodology MacDonald himself models and promotes. Utilizing MacDonald’s relational methodology evinces his intentional facilitating of Mythopoesis. It also reveals how oversights have impeded critical readings both of MacDonald’s writing and of his character. It evokes a redressing of MacDonald’s relationship with his Scottish cultural, theological, and familial environment – of how his writing is a response that rises out of these, rather than, as has so often been asserted, a mere reaction against them. Consequently it becomes evident that key relationships, both literary and personal, have been neglected in MacDonald scholarship – relationships that confirm MacDonald’s convictions and inform his writing, and the examination of which restores his identity as a literature scholar. Of particular relational import in this reassessment is A.J. Scott, a Scottish visionary intentionally chosen by MacDonald to mentor him in a holistic Weltanschauung. Little has been written on Scott, yet not only was he MacDonald’s prime influence in adulthood, but he forged the literary vocation that became MacDonald’s own. Previously unexamined personal and textual engagement with John Ruskin enables entirely new readings of standard MacDonald texts, as does the textual engagement with Matthew Arnold and F.D. Maurice. These close readings, informed by the established context, demonstrate MacDonald’s emergence, practice, and intent as a mythopoeic writer

    Alien Registration- Macdonald, Ellen S. (Paris, Oxford County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/21116/thumbnail.jp

    Ellen MacDonald

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    of Auld's Cov

    Eugene MacDonald Bonner Collection - Accession 743

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    The Eugene MacDonald Bonner Collection is a good source for the study of the life and art of the North Carolina born composer, music critic, and author, Eugene MacDonald Bonner (1889-1983). It contains some letter by Bonner himself; plus others by his aunt, Mary Virginia Bonner; and his friends Leon Barzin, conductor and music director of the National Orchestral Association; Claudio D’Agata, a conductor who knew Bonner when he lived in Taormina, Italy; Alan Hartman, a friend who knew him in New York; and H.C. Haynsworth who met Bonner, several taped recordings of his music, a number of photographs and newspaper articles, and several miscellaneous genealogical references to the Bonner Family. There are also tapes of interviews by Olimpio Guidi with Eva Strazzeri and Claudio and Brigette D’Agata.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/1733/thumbnail.jp

    Ellen MacDonald

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    of Glassbur

    Mrs. Ellen J. (MacDonald) MacDonald

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    Eunice Kathleen (Atwell) Chisholm

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    orphaned at age 3 ; raised by Hugh + Cassie Ellen MacDonald, Afto
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