14,108 research outputs found

    Fitzpatrick, Joann. North River. Photograph of birthday party.

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    A photograph of a birthday party with 5 young children around acake and one little boy blowing out the candles. Left to right: Sylvia (Fitzpatrick) McCabe, Wayne Fitzpatrick, Marie (Fitzpatrick) Spracklin, Paul Fitzpatrick, Kathy Fitzpatrick

    Fitzpatrick, Joann. North River. Photograph of group of children posing for picture.

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    A photograph of the Fitzpatrick family, Ken, Wayne, Michelle, Kathy, Sib, Marie, Joan (center), Pau

    Fitzpatrick, Joann. North River. Photograph of 2 woman and a man in a yard.

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    A photograph of 2 young women and a young man in a yard with a cliff behind them. Left to right: Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Peter Neville (Jr), Marie Neville

    Making space: a conversation about women and the performance of free noise

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    A discussion between Marie Thompson and Susan Fitzpatrick on the involvement and inclusion of women in UK free noise scenes.</p

    Making space: a conversation about women and the performance of free noise

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    A discussion between Marie Thompson and Susan Fitzpatrick on the involvement and inclusion of women in UK free noise scenes.</p

    On midnight beach

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    In this beautiful, epic coming-of-age novel, an old tale is rewoven as a stunning YA story by well-known Irish author/illustrator Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick. I kept clear of Dog Cullen. Till the summer we turned seventeen, the summer the dolphin came to Carrig Cove... Donegal, 1976. When a dolphin takes up residence in Carrig Cove, Emer and her best friend, Fee, feel like they have an instant connection with it. Then Dog Cullen and his sidekick, Kit, turn up, and the four friends begin to sneak out at midnight to go down to the beach, daring each other to swim closer and closer to the creature... But the fame and fortune the dolphin brings to their small village builds resentment amongst their neighbours across the bay, and the summer days get longer and hotter ... There is something wild and intense in the air. Love feels fierce, old hatreds fester, and suddenly everything feels worth fighting for014-01

    Letters received by Ben Fitzpatrick from 1868 to 1875.

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    Most of the letters are from Fitzpatrick's mother, Aurelia, and an acquaintance named Marie in Lynchburg, Virginia, and one letter was written by Ben Fitzpatrick himself

    Interview: Anne-Marie Fortier

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    This paper is an edited version of an email interview conducted by Debra Ferreday and Adi Kuntsman with Anne-Marie Fortier, the author of Multicultural Horizons: Diversity and the Limits of the Civil Nation (Routledge, 2008). Fortier’s work has been informative in the development of some of the arguments explored in this special issue; in their conversation Ferreday and Kuntsman asked her to comment on the ideas of haunting, racial imaginaries, nostalgia, national anxieties, political feelings and hopes for the future
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