711 research outputs found

    Ellison\u27s Hemingway

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    The Selected Letters of Ralph Ellison, published in 2019, along with the essays in Shadow and Act (1964), reveal Ernest Hemingway to have been a major preoccupation for the author of Invisible Man. While Ellison did acknowledge that Hemingway once served as the true father-as-artist of so many of us who came to writing during the late thirties, Hemingway\u27s influence on Ellison was, however, neither simple nor direct. Instead, Hemingway allowed Ellison a way to think about questions of influence : about technique, about producing emotion, and, above all, about how an artist might grapple with America\u27s great moral theme

    Senator Ellison Smith studying legislation.

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    Typed Description: \u27SENATOR SMITH PONDERS OVER FARM BILL - Senator Ellison Smith (D) of South Carolina plans today to introduce the farm bill into the Senate, which during this session has been much discussion. Photo shows Mr. Smith pondering over the bill which he plans to put through. Mr. Smith seems a bit worried although today is the deadline for the bill\u27https://egrove.olemiss.edu/fmjohnston/1236/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from George Cochran Doub, Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division and Enoch E. Ellison, Chief, Japanese Claims Section, to Mr. and Mrs. Kiyoshi Uyekawa, April 24, 1959

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    Letters from George Chochran Doub, Assistant Attorney General, United States Department of Justice Civil Division, and Enoch E. Ellison, United States Department of Justice Chief, Japanese Claims Section to Mr. and Mrs. Kiyoshi Uyekawa. They confirmed that their U.S. citizenship was reinstated and enclosed their birth certificates. "市民権" that is, U.S. citizenship is written on the envelope.The Kiyoshi Uyekawa Tule Lake Camp Collection comprises of the wartime publications collected by Kiyoshi Uyekawa while incarcerated in the Tule Lake camp, such as Tule Lake newsletters and bulletins, materials issued by the Pro-Japanese group, Sokoku Hoshidan (or Hoshi Dan), WRA publications, his family's incarceration documents, which include documents regarding his and his wife, Mitsuye‘s repatriation, his fictional works’ manuscripts, bulletins and manuscripts of haiku poems authored by the members of the haiku societies incarcerated in the camps, and letters from Kyo Koide, who was a prominent figure in the community as a photographer, physician, and poet under the pseudonym, Banjin Koide

    Why do pouched mice (Saccostomus campestris) hoard food?

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    Rejections and the Importance of First Response Times (Or: How Many Rejections Do Others Receive?)

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    Previous studies about the academic publishing process consider the publication delay as starting from the submission to the publishing journal. This ignores the potential delay caused by rejections received from previous journals. Knowing how many times papers are submitted prior to publication is essential for evaluating the importance of different publication delays and the refereeing process cost, and can improve our decisions about if and how the review process should be altered, decisions that affect the productivity of economists and other scholars. Using numerical analysis and evidence on acceptance rates of various journals, I estimate that most manuscripts are submitted between three and six times prior to publication. This implies that the first response time (the time between submission and first editorial decision) is much more important than other parts of the publication delay, suggesting important policy implications for editors and referees.academic-publishing-process; turnaround-time; academic- journals; review-process; publication-delay; rejections

    “My Family Assumed I Was Going to Fight It”: Experiences of Social Support & Relationships After a Brain Tumor Diagnosis

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    From Crossref journal articles via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: ppub 2023-07-01, issued 2023-07-01, epub 2023-07-26Publication status: PublishedChris McVittie - ORCID: 0000-0003-0657-7524 https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0657-7524Marion Ellison - ORCID: 0000-0002-0016-7105 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0016-7105Item is not available in this repository.Date Presented 04/20/2023 The study explored the perceptions of social support and relationships after a primary brain tumor diagnosis. It was found that seeking support was associated with costs, and individuals did not always ask for it when needed. Primary Author and Speaker: Anna Zanotto Contributing Authors: Chris McVittie, Marion Ellison, Karen Goodallpubpu
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