90 research outputs found

    Boycott!: Louise Imogen Guiney and the American Protective Association

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    Irish-American poet and author Louise Imogen Guiney endured anti-Catholic discrimination in Boston during the 1890’s. Well known to contemporary Bostonians as both a writer and the daughter of an Irish Roman Catholic Civil War officer, Guiney was appointed postmaster in Auburndale in January 1894. She initially liked the job’s duties, pay, and stability. However, many residents of Auburndale, including those associated with the anti-Catholic American Protective Association, boycotted the post office by not buying stamps there. As a result, in October 1894 her salary was cut. Guiney’s friends subsequently led a counterattack that resulted in stamp purchases coming to Auburndale from Roman Catholics nationwide. Despite her reappointment to the postmaster position in 1897, Guiney’s ill health and dislike for the long hours of the job led to her resignation on 5 July 1897. In 1901 she moved to England, where she lived for the remainder of her life

    Investigating the Palm Oil Supply Chain at Oxford Brookes University's Headington Campus in Order to Examine the Geographies of Sustainable Palm Oil Production

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    Exploring the presence/absence of palm oil in Oxford Brookes’ Headington Campus restaurants, assessing the sustainability of its sources, and examining the wider procurement policy implications. This paper aims to understand the presence/absence of palm oil in Oxford Brookes’ Headington Campus restaurants, assess the sustainability of its sources and examine the wider procurement policy implications. Oxford Brookes was the first ‘fair trade university’ in 2003, and has a commitment to sustainability. The lack of literature on traceability of palm oil demands research to better understand the palm oil supply chain in UK organisations such as universities. Palm oil is in over 50% of prepared food in the UK and is the most produced and consumed vegetable oil in the world (WWF, 2017). Palm oil has serious effects on the environment and ecosystems in regions where it is produced, and a number of organisations exist with varying aims and requirements on sustainable palm oil. Firstly, this research will trace the palm oil in the Oxford Brookes’ supply chain and identifying the geographic region from where the palm oil was sourced and whether it is sourced sustainably or not. Secondly, the presence/absence of sustainable and conventional (i.e. non-sustainable) palm oil in the Oxford Brookes supply chain will be explained. Here, things to explore include why Oxford Brookes has a sustainable policy, whether the university has chosen to reduce palm oil from their supply chain and source from other vegetable oils. Data will also be obtained from semi-structured interviews with the suppliers and Brookes Procurement. This paper will highlight the lack of transparency in the palm oil supply chain and explore organisations in place that aim to increase traceability

    The Octopus

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    An interview with author Krissy Kneen, with critical reflections on her book 'Triptych' (Text, 2011

    Resuspended freeze-dried Nannochloropsis as a model laboratory system for concentrated fresh Nannochloropsis in ultrasound cell disruption experiments

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    Microalgae have rigid, complex cell walls hindering direct lipid extraction. Cell disruption techniques are used to rupture these cellular structures to increase lipid extraction. Researchers investigating the downstream processing of microalgae do not always have access to microalgal cultivation systems to generate large amounts of fresh microalgal biomass. Using resuspended freeze-dried microalgal biomass as a model laboratory system for concentrated fresh biomass during cell disruption experiments offers greater flexibility in experimental planning and omits investment costs of microalgal cultivation equipment. So far, it however remains unclear whether freeze-dried resuspended biomass can be used as a model laboratory system to represent concentrated fresh biomass during cell disruption and lipid extraction experiments. This paper thus evaluated the suitability of resuspended freeze-dried Nannochloropsis as a model laboratory system for concentrated fresh Nannochloropsis during cell disruption. Ultrasound assisted cell disruption was used as example cell disruption technique and lipid extraction efficiency and free fatty acid content were investigated. Tap water and 3% sodium chloride are both suitable resuspension media for the resuspension of freeze-dried Nannochloropsis. Resuspension duration should be limited (< 120 min) to prevent the formation of free fatty acids. The condition of the biomass (concentrated fresh, or resuspended freeze-dried) prior to ultrasound assisted cell disruption did not influence the resulting lipid extraction efficiency. Resuspended freeze-dried Nannochloropsis biomass in tap water or 3% sodium chloride can thus be used as a model laboratory system for fresh microalgal biomass during research on ultrasound assisted lipid extraction. The generalization of the results to other cultivation conditions, cell disruption techniques, components of interest or microalgal species should be carefully assessed.The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by Flanders’ Food and funded by Flanders Innovation and Entrepreneurship (VLAIO) through the cSBR project EffSep (Grant number HBC.2019.0012)

    Gray Display Typeface

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    Gray Display is a typeface based on a distinctive set of capital letters known as Oran Mor Monumental, designed by author and artist Alasdair Gray. Gray commissioned Edwin Pickstone, Imogen Ayres and Neil Mcguire to digitise and adjust his hand lettered capitals into type and to compliment these with lowercase letters, punctuation and numerals in order to create a fully functioning coherent typeface. Gray used the typeface for works such as his late partner Morag McAlpine's headstone as well as prints and other designs. After his death it was used by BBC Scotland in a screencard to commemorate the author's passing and has gone on to be a key component in multiple works associated with the Alasdair Gray Archive such as the Alasdair Gray Stones which form a distinctive part of the Garscube Link Canal regeneration project. The task of interpreting these artists letters into a coherent typeface was greatly aided by wise guidance from consultants Stefan Ellmer and Nicolas Sloan

    Cool For You: Joan Didion, Renata Adler, and Elizabeth Hardwick

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    © 2025 Isabella Imogen Constance Gullifer-LaurieCool is a term that defies conceptual fixity, evoking both intensity and restraint. In the latter half of the twentieth century, cool moved from being synonymous with the counterculture to the mainstream. Within the North-American cultural imaginary it signified a nonchalance and ironic rebelliousness at the same time as it summoned the effort of calculated detachment and conforming reserve. This thesis engages with this expansive, supple category of cool to consider the reception of the authorial persona and the textual production of three writers who shaped public discourse during this period: Joan Didion, Renata Adler, and Elizabeth Hardwick. Taking cool as an object of analysis, this thesis develops an embodied, biographical, paratextual literary criticism in order to produce new critical encounters with these writers, examining the relationship of style and celebrity to fiction, screenwriting, journalism, and criticism, with a focus on three novels: Didion’s Play It As It Lays (1970), Adler’s Speedboat (1976), and Hardwick’s Sleepless Nights (1979). This thesis elaborates on three aspects of coolness to advance its theoretical and textual engagement with each author, studying Didion’s allure, Adler’s attitude, and Hardwick’s authority

    Dick Dinman Salutes Criterion’s “Dietrich & Von Sternberg in Hollywood” Collection (Part Two)

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    Acclaimed author and film scholar Imogen Sara Smith rejoins producer/host Dick Dinman as both discuss all six of the Dietrich/Von Sternberg cinema milestones and marvel at the virtually immaculate transfers and wide ranging special features included in this dazzling collection.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/wmpg_dvdcotr/1252/thumbnail.jp

    The Linguistics of Spoken Communication in Early Modern English Writing:Exploring Bess of Hardwick’s manuscript letters

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    This book uses a corpus of manuscript letters from Bess of Hardwick to investigate how linguistic features characteristic of spoken communication function within early modern epistolary prose. Using these letters as a primary data source with reference to other epistolary materials from the early modern period (1500-1750), the author examines them in a unique and systematic way. The book is the first of its kind to combine a replicable scribal profiling technique, used to identify holograph and scribal handwriting within the letters, with innovative analyses of the language they contain. Furthermore, by adopting a discourse-analytic approach to the language and making reference to the socio-historical context of language use, the book provides an alternative perspective to the one often presented in traditional historical accounts of English. This volume will appeal to students and scholars of early modern English and historical linguistics

    Taking the tool analogy seriously: Forms and naming in the cratylus

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    Copyright © The Author(s) 2014. Published by Cambridge University Press. It has been suggested that the so-called tool analogy passage of Plato's Cratylus presents us with a moderate linguistic naturalism that can stand or fall independently of the more unpalatable etymological and mimetic theories advanced later in the dialogue. This paper offers a reading of the tool analogy which argues that Socrates' employment of Forms (and in particular Species-Forms), together with a careful distinction between the types of knowledge associated with making and using tools, aims to establish a radical linguistic naturalism that constrains the intrinsic properties of names. This should be clear if we take Socrates' claim seriously that names are tools: tools in general can only function successfully if they exhibit the relevant structural, compositional and (to some extent) material properties. Since Socrates claims that names are a class of tools and not merely like tools in some respects, as many have supposed, then what holds for tools in general must also hold for names

    Movement directors in contemporary theatre conversations on craft

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    Intro -- Half-Title -- Series -- Title -- Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- 1 Early practitioners and practices -- 2 Themes -- 3 Jane Gibson -- 4 Sue Lefton -- 5 Kate Flatt -- 6 Toby Sedgwick -- 7 Siân Williams -- 8 Struan Leslie -- 9 Ellen Kane -- 10 Peter Darling -- 11 Steven Hoggett -- 12 Ann Yee -- 13 Imogen Knight -- 14 Shelley Maxwell -- 15 Future voices -- 16 Beyond the room: Contexts and Structures -- Glossary -- References -- Further reading -- About the author -- Copyrigh
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