2,762 research outputs found

    SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer signing book

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    Photograph of SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer signing boo

    Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer

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    Photograph of Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palme

    SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer talking to event attendees

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    Photograph of SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer talking to Rita Lewi

    Guidelines for Data Annotation

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    Included here are a coding manual and supplementary examples of gesture forms (in still images and video recordings) that informed the coding of the first author (Kate Mesh) and four project reliability coders

    Preview of a reading by mystery novelist Kate Kennedy, author of End Over End,

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    Preview of a reading by mystery novelist Kate Kennedy, author of End Over End, which is being presented at Nonesuch Books in South Portland April 4

    Declining Unionization, Rising Inequality: an Interview with Kate Bronfenbrenner

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    Kate Bronfenbrenner is director of labor education research at the New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University. She worked for many years as an organizer with the United Woodcutters Association in Mississippi and the Service Employees International Union in Boston. She is the author, co-author and editor of numerous books and articles on union strategies

    The Power of Story: Children in a Time of Sadness, with Author Kate DiCamillo

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    Kate DiCamillo, writer of stories for children, visits to read from her work and talk about the solace and hope that literature offers. The two-time Newbery Award winner is joined by John Schumacher, part-time lecturer at Rutgers University and the Ambassador of School Libraries for Scholastic, who will moderate this special event.Jacobs, Lawrence R.. (2020). The Power of Story: Children in a Time of Sadness, with Author Kate DiCamillo. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/225945

    Implied Author, Overall Consideration, and Subtext of "Desiree's Baby"

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    This essay explores how to infer from a text the image of the implied author. It examines Kate Chopin's "Desiree's Baby" (1893), which has been widely regarded as an indictment of racism but which an "overall consideration" of the implied author's choices will lead us to see as a racist text. Through the interaction of various details in the text, the implied author suggests three racist dichotomies: (1) white characters' nondiscrimination versus black characters' discrimination, (2) positive slavery under white masters versus negative slavery under a black master, and (3) superior whites versus inferior blacks. This implied racist stance reflects the historical context of Chopin's personal experiences, but it contrasts with the quite different racial stances of the implied authors of some other Chopin narratives with different thematic designs. The complexity of the narratives under the name "Kate Chopin" offers an opportunity not only to gain a better understanding of the concept of implied author but also to clarify the relations (connections as well as disparities) among textual, intertextual, and extratextual evidence in literary interpretation in general.LiteratureA&HCI4ARTICLE2285-3113

    Kate: The Keen Android Travel Extension

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    Kate is a working prototype that shows that an app can assist a traveller in the travel decision process. Kate is built up from modules, the source of travel data (now the calendar) and travel time prediction (now Tripcast from Model IT) can easily be switched to another source which will require only the change of one module.Man Machine InteractionMediamaticsElectrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Scienc

    Kate Richards: madness

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    Kate Richards’ bleakly beautiful, confronting and important book, Madness: A Memoir, describes her 15 years coping with psychosis and depression, and her long, hard-won journey back to sanity, with the help of a wise and compassionate psychologist. In this video, she speaks with Ranjana Srivastava, an oncologist and fellow author, about her experience – and about being able to write from deep within it, with expertise as both a medical researcher and writer. &nbsp
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