1,579,146 research outputs found

    Cocktail Hour, Gregory and Watts

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    For Art Month Gregory and Watts have created a series of videos and paintings unpacking the complexity of the simple cocktail. As the cocktail sees a slow revival thanks to Mad Men and Hipsters they ask what’s so important about a cocktail? The performance of making and drinking cocktails is one of the many rituals of class, in fact that functions all the more through the contemporary mask of irony. This knowledge functions even through denial (“I don’t know how to make a Manhattan”) particularly in art where artists are still expected to pretend their field isn’t elitist. Gregory and Watts make and drink a series of cocktails to unmask the myth of their own position as well as the myths/history/ideology of the sites in which they make them. For example Cosmopolitan The Block situates the making and the drinking of the Sex and the City “girls favourite drink” in the newly gentrified Redfern area. The Block, once was an area of Aboriginal managed housing but it has recently been sold off. What are the complicated interests and histories running through the site that can lead to two artists, surrounded by “alcohol is prohibited” signs, to make a Cosmopolitan

    Sheep by store, Ganado, 1910 (photo by Edna H. Gregory)

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    Photograph by Edna Gregory of a flock of sheep being herded at Ganado, Arizona in 1910. Photo (unnumbered) from Herbert E. Gregory Book 4: Navajo, San Juan, 191

    Hotel at Kanab. Gregory by car

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    Photograph by Dr. L. F. Noble showing Hotel Highway at Kanab, Utah, with Dr. Herbert Gregory standing by a car, in 1922. Photo from Herbert E. Gregory Book 8: 1915 - 1924

    Oral history interview with Betty Gregory

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    Betty Gregory attended Oklahoma A&M College (now Oklahoma State University) from 1942-1946. She earned a degree in Home Economics and Foods & Nutrition. Betty discussed her involvement with the Alpha Delta Pi sorority as well as the atmosphere of campus during World War II. Betty met her husband, Edward, on campus and the two had three children, all OSU graduates.The O-STATE Stories Oral History collection is comprised of interviews which chronicle the rich history, heritage, and traditions of Oklahoma State University

    THEOLOGIA AND OIKONOMIA: THE SOTERIOLOGICAL GROUND OF GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS’S TRINITARIAN THEOLOGY.

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    This dissertation explores the soteriological ground of the trinitarian theology of Gregory of Nazianzus and establishes a consistent link in his thought between the spheres of oikonomia and theologia. His writings are studied against the background of contemporary theological and philosophical trends thus demonstrating the context within which he elaborated his main theological concepts as well as their novelty. Although Gregory drew heavily on the heritage of his intellectual master Origen, he significantly changed his perspective from cosmological speculations to reflections on the historical embodiment of Christ’s salvific activity. This shift was to lead Gregory towards a positive view of the body and of bodily desire which he considered a vital force in human existence capable of union with God in the process of deification. Gregory thus fully identified Christ with humanity in its total manifestation, including the human mind with its fallen and rebellious desire, now assumed and redeemed in the incarnation. Hence Gregory placed the suffering image of Christ at the heart of his trinitarian theological construction. As this thesis argues, around this image evolves the whole dogmatic edifice of Gregory’s theology. Christ’s divine sovereignty is understood not in separation and independence from the passion on Cross. Rather, its full manifestation is only possible because of the cross, because of Christ’s free and willing acceptance of it. The whole set of interrelationships between the suffering Christ and the Father and the Holy Spirit are depicted according to the logic of coincidence of sovereignty and humiliation. It is precisely in this combination of theological themes – expressed with our new concept of “kenotic sovereignty” – that the focus of the present thesis is located. This innovative spiritual disposition shapes both Gregory’s theological epistemology and his hermeneutical strategy. Arguing for the possibility of knowing the divine in and through human bodily existence and corroborating this view with suitably interpreted Scriptural evidence, he opens the horizons for the human ascension to the realm of the divine trinitarian life. In this way Gregory envisages access to the transcendent theology of the Trinity which is understood by him in purely personal terms, insofar as it implies the intimate conversation of God with us “as friends” (Or. 38.7). This unique reworking of classical and Christian themes is possible because of Gregory’s insistence that divine sovereignty and transcendence become intelligible exclusively in the context of Easter. Thus the habitually neglected narrative of the cross and resurrection of Christ in the thought of the Theologian is the only key to unlock his understanding of the luminous mystery of the Trinity

    Titicaca Island. \u27Sacrificial Table.\u27 (Near Chala). Showing Prof. Gregory.

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    Photograph of Herbert Gregory and other members of the 1912 Yale Peruvian Expedition examining a stone altar on Titicaca Island. Photo 4095 from Herbert E. Gregory Book 13, page 4

    Gregory "Jack" Elsken World War II memoirs

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    This collection consists of a manuscript of the World War II memoir of Gregory "Jack" Elsken as told to Brigid Elsken Galloway

    William-gregory/OptimalInterpolation: CS2S3 daily pan-Arctic radar freeboards

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    This repository contains a quick-look data set of daily pan-Arctic radar freeboard and uncertainty estimates for the winter 2018-2019 season. These data were generated using the methodology outlined in "A Bayesian approach towards daily pan-Arctic sea ice freeboard estimates from combined CryoSat-2 and Sentinel-3 (CS2S3) satellite observations", by Gregory et al. 2021. The quick-look product is derived by pre-scribing hyperparameters before generating the predictions (see main article)

    Letter from Jane Howe Gregory to Barry A. Crouch regarding Gregory's research involving women in the Texas Penitentiary.

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    This is a letter from Jane Howe Gregory to Barry A. Crouch regarding Gregory's research involving women in the Texas Penitentiary. In this letter, Jane Howe Gregory thanks Barry A. Crouch for sending her documents on the investigation of freed women in the Texas Penitentiary and discusses her current work with Texas prisoner records. She also states that she is sending Crouch a blank record from her database and the parts of her survey that she believes are relevant for his work

    The 'Prehistory' of Gregory of Tours: An Analysis of Books I-IV of Gregory's Histories

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    This thesis is concerned with the structure and agenda of the first four books of Gregory of Tours� Histories. Building on the idea that it was the death of Gregory�s patron, king Sigibert, at the end of Book IV, that stimulated the writing of the Histories, I argue that the agenda of the first four books, the �Prehistory�, relates directly to the events that brought about the Civil War that resulted in Sigibert�s death. This focus has previously gone unrecognised. I suggest that there is a strong structural framework to this section of the Histories, designed to promote the author�s agenda. This confirms that Books I-IV were conceived as one unit, and also heightens the level at which modern scholarship should view Gregory�s literary achievement. This in turn should illuminate the state of Merovingian education and society as a whole. The message behind Gregory�s carefully structured �Prehistory� is an expansion of the Preface to Book V, in which Gregory pleads with his audience, his contemporary kings, to follow the path of God, like their ancestor, Clovis. This will bring peace and an end to greed and Civil War. This path, continually espoused by the agents of the Lord, His bishops, would lead to a successful reign and a healthy kingdom. Failure to listen to Gregory and his colleagues, would lead only to ruin, a message reiterated throughout the Prehistory, and highlighted in the death of king Sigibert
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