113 research outputs found

    Author Robert Dessaix, Melbourne, 2001 [picture] /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation see file, NLA11/672.; Part of the collection: Portraits of significant Australians, 1980-2003.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Purchased from the photographer 2012

    Author Robert Drewe, Sydney, 2003 [picture] /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation see file, NLA11/672.; Part of the collection: Portraits of significant Australians, 1980-2003.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Purchased from the photographer 2012

    Author Shirley Hazzard, New York, 1984 [picture] /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation see file, NLA11/672.; Part of the collection: Portraits of significant Australians, 1980-2003.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Purchased from the photographer 2012

    Author Geraldine Brooks, Sydney, 1997 [picture] /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation see file, NLA11/672.; Part of the collection: Portraits of significant Australians, 1980-2003.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Purchased from the photographer 2012

    Lorrie Moore has some instructions on how to read her new book

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    An interview with the prize-winning author Lorrie Moore about her new collection of essays, "See What Can Be Done.

    Barriers to Reentry Into Society: Listening to Parolees' Perceptions

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    Abstract Date Presented 3/30/2017 Results of a phenomenological study of parolees’ barriers to community reintegration are presented. Participants were 38 nonviolent offenders living in three transitional living facilities. Their perceptions of barriers were characterized by five themes that emerged from focus group data. Primary Author and Speaker: Casey Cromer Stewart Additional Authors and Speakers: Lorrie George-Paschal</jats:p

    From an Unpublished Interview with Lorrie Moore

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    Lorrie Moore is the author of three novels and five collections of stories. Moore has been recognized for her work with the Irish Times International Fiction Prize and a Lannan Foundation fellowship, as well as the PEN/Malamud Award and the Rea Award for her achievement in the short story. Her most recent novel, A Gate at the Stairs, was shortlisted for the 2010 Orange Prize and the PEN/Faulkner. Her most recent collection, Bark, was shortlisted for the Story Prize, the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award, and the Premio Gregor von Rezzori prize. She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2001 and to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2005. Booth’s Eliza Tudor interviewed Moore when she visited campus in the fall of 2010, just after the release of A Gate at the Stairs

    Sloboda u prevođenju: prijevod kratkih priča Lorrie Moore

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    Lorrie Moore is an American short fiction writer, who has not been translated into Croatian. In order to show how the freedom of the translator has developed throughout the history of translation studies, this thesis offered an overview of a selection of well-known translation theories and approaches, defined by established names, such as Friedrich Scheliermacher, Walter Benjamin, Eugene Nida, Lawrence Venuti, and others. While the chronological overview showcased the results and reasonings for these methods, in the end it also confirmed that the choice among the numerous strategies ought to be left to the translator, especially with a complex author like Moore. Besides offering a theoretical outline, the crucial part of this thesis is the translation of selected short stories from the collection, which function as a confirmation or a dismissal of what has been explained in the theoretical introduction to the translation.Lorrie Moore američka je autorica kratkih priča koja još nije prevedena na hrvatski jezik. S ciljem da se prikaže kako se pogled na slobodu prevoditelja mijenjao kroz povijest teorije prevođenja, ovaj rad donosi prikaz izbora postojećih prevoditeljskih teorija i pristupa prevođenju, koje su definirali priznati autori kao što su Friedrich Scheliermacher, Walter Benjamin, Eugene Nida, Lawrence Venuti i drugi. Premda je kronološki pregled prikazao rezultate i razmišljanja iza ovih metoda, naposljetku je također potvrdio kako prevoditelj treba imati slobodu biranja među mnogobrojnim strategijama, pogotovo kad je u pitanju kompleksan autor, kao što je Lorrie Moore. Osim teorijskog pregleda, bitan je dio ovog rada prijevod odabranih kratkih priča iz zbirke, koji služi kao bi se potvrdilo ili opovrgnulo ono što je rečeno u teorijskom uvodu prijevoda

    Designing a Bright Future for Print Collections

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    This is the author's final post-print. The version of record is found at https://against-the-grain.com/toc

    Open Stacks in Library Design

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    abstract: Technological innovation has fostered structural shifts in scholarly communications and cooperation among academic institutions over time. The shift into ubiquitous digital content ushered in transformational changes to research and teaching. The change presents an opportunity for libraries to transform themselves as well, rethinking how we select, display, share, and curate creative, scholarly, and informational works in all formats. People who use academic libraries have great interest in where these works reside, how they are accessed, and how their future is ensured. We at Arizona State University (ASU) Library propose that the bookless library model represents an unfulfilled promise to those we serve. Instead, we posit that academic libraries can still host tangible materials in multiple formats while adapting a user-focused and intentional design approach to scholarly works, keeping them in openly accessible shelves in our buildings, even as we increase available study space. Open stacks, available for viewing and browsing by the public, offer an intentionally designed, material experience as a key component of space design. They also remind us that not all knowledge exists in digital form.This is the authors' final accepted manuscript, prior to publication. The published version is available at http://muse.jhu.edu/article/69862
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