50,399 research outputs found
Author Interview with Brian D. Anderson
Brian D. Anderson was our feature artist of the week, October 19th - 23rd, 2020.https://jagworks.southalabama.edu/vid_presentations/1010/thumbnail.jp
First person – Brian Jenkins
ABSTRACT
First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Journal of Cell Science, helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Brian Jenkins is the first author on ‘Effects of mutating α-tubulin lysine 40 on sensory dendrite development’, published in Journal of Cell Science. Brian conducted the research in this article while a post-doc in the lab of Jill Wildonger at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI. He is now at the Jungers Center for Neurosciences Research, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR, where his research interests include visualizing all things related to how cells transport RNA, proteins and organelles throughout the cell.</jats:p
Mary Brian
Cigarette card featuring a left side profile of Mary Brian. Details of birth place and real name given on reverse. Mentions her first screen role as "Wendy" in "Peter Pan". Card comes from the middle of Brian's career
MEET THE STAFF | This is Brian Malott
Contact Brian:
Brian Malott
Indigenous Career Consultant
Email: [email protected]
226-980-6624
#FanshaweCollege #Indigenous #FirstNationshttps://first.fanshawec.ca/firstnationscentre_visualcontent_videos_info/1010/thumbnail.jp
Competition policy. by Brian Ellis
tag=1 data=Competition policy. by Brian Ellis
tag=2 data=Ellis, Brian
tag=3 data=Australian Rationalist,
tag=5 data=46
tag=6 data=Autumn/Winter 1998
tag=7 data=51-56.
tag=8 data=ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
tag=9 data=COMPETITION%CORPORATISATION%NATIONAL COMPETITION POLICY%PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR EFFECTIVENESS%SERVICE DELIVERY%SOCIAL POLICY%INNOVATION
tag=10 data=Examines the Government's National Competition Policy in relation to encouraging R&D, and the corporisation of public services and utilites. The author is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at La Trobe UNiversity and Vice-President of the Rationalist Society of Australia. Article Taken from What's New.
tag=13 data=CABExamines the Government's National Competition Policy in relation to encouraging R&D, and the corporisation of public services and utilites. The author is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at La Trobe UNiversity and Vice-President of the Rationalist Society of Australia. Article Taken from What's New
Art Behind Gaming: Brian D. Anderson
A discussion with author Brian D. Anderson about worldbuilding in fantasy. Part of the Art Behind Gaming Online Con.https://jagworks.southalabama.edu/vid_presentations/1046/thumbnail.jp
Brian DuPree Real Estate
Brian DuPree Real Estate discovered a lack of true client care within the existing real estate market. With that knowledge, Brian set out to join a business where client care came first and closing deals came second. Through these experiences, Brian is capable of providing a comprehensive investment approach to every transaction. He commands an understanding of the forces that drive value and will equip you to make the best possible decision. When you work with Brian DuPree Real Estate, you'll notice his responsiveness, patience and ability to explain each step of the process, backed by solid market analysis. As a 6th generation Georgian, Brian grew up in Athens and has deep connections to the city and its surrounding neighbourhoods.
Brian DuPree has a BA in Business from Georgia State University and is skilled Realtor with experience in residential, vacation home & investment real estate. Brian DuPree Real Estate has years of experiences and millions of sales under his belt. He know the stress that home buying and selling brings, but also believes it should be an exciting and rewarding experience. Brian DuPree Real Estate takes every opportunity to educate his clients as he walks them through the process together.
Brian DuPree Real Estate delivers results that exceed expectations and creates victories for his clients. Using his empathy and competitive nature, he advocates tirelessly for each of his clients to provide an extraordinary experience. When faced with complex challenges, Brian engages his creative drive to march a deal across the finish line. Brian DuPree Real Estate wants to become your real estate resource for life
A Relational Theory of Authorship
Over the years we have heard the debate as to whether authorship emanates solely from the individual or from the cultural context in which they inhabit. Writers such as Professors Woodmansee, Jaszi and Cohen have asserted a cultural theory of authorship. On one hand, there is the liberal philosophy of autonomous creativity evidenced in the notion of a "romantic author" (after the period known as romanticism). On the other hand we have more of a communitarian notion – that the author acts in a cultural context and authorship to some extent must be linked back to the social existence within which the author is situated.\ud
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This article argues that for too long we have privileged the notion of the romantic author so much so that it is hard to argue for any other approach to copyright than one that focuses primarily on the author and their assignees such as publishers or associated commercialising agents such as recording companies. Furthermore it suggests that this approach fits awkwardly with the burgeoning networked society fuelled by the Internet to the point where it threatens innovation and the potential for productivity. To this end the article argues that we should more explicitly acknowledge the contribution of culture to authorship and more so the role of each and every individual in assisting and nurturing that authorship, as well as the contribution of users to creativity through consumptive, productive and transformative use of copyright works
Brian Greenwood - 6 May 2008
Derek Thorne talks with Brian Greenwood of The London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine who has been awarded the first Hideyo Noguchi Africa Prize by the Japanese government in recognition of his achievements in tropical disease research in Africa
The question of gendered voice in some contemporary Irish novels by Brian Moore and John McGahern
This thesis questions the use of the 'voice' metaphor in contemporary Irish cultural studies in order to examine
the ways in which gendered identities are constructed in some Irish Catholic communities in twentieth-century
Ireland. With reference to novels by Brian Moore and
John McGahern as well as to Judith Butler's theories of performativity and citational practices, it argues that gendered identities are constructed through the repetitive citation of hegemonic cultural discourses. This thesis
focuses on the ways in which gendered identities are produced and maintained through the citation of the official discourses of the Catholic Church and the State as
well as the more mundane discourses related to popular nationalism and the family.
The first two chapters concentrate on novels whose protagonists are trying to construct powerful identities in urban Irish society through the manipulation of gendered discourses. The discussion of Moore's The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne identifies some of the strategies through which conventional Irish women's voices are constructed
and questions the validity of the category of 'authentic' women's voices. In the chapter relating to McGahem's The
Pornographer, the powerful, abstract male voice is exposed as a performative construct which is sustained only through the abjection of those elements which disrupt the narrator's performance of masculinity.
The remaining chapters concentrate on the use of idealised images such as those of the 'woman-as-nation' and the iconised mother in novels by Moore and McGahem. Moore's The
Mangan Inheritance provides the basis for a discussion of whether or not voices attributed to women in texts by Irish men can be read in ways that disrupt the apparent authority of Irish men's voices. This thesis discusses the issues
raised when men participate in the deconstruction
of idealised images of Irish women. The final chapter examines the processes through which conventional identities are discursively constructed and maintained in two novels by John McGahem: The Dark and Amongst Women. This thesis contends that through the strategic
redeployment of those voices attributed to idealised images of Irish women, voices which are conventionally regarded
as silent, patriarchal gendered identities can be destabilised or displaced
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