125,513 research outputs found
Parenting pedagogies in the marketing of children’s apps
The market for children’s apps aimed at pre-school aged children is expanding in the context of the schoolification and marketisation of very young children’s education and development. When subject to critical analysis, the download pages pertaining to these apps reveal the dominant discourse to be one of ‘pedagogical responsibilisation’, for parents who seek to optimise their children’s educational opportunities. A neoliberal market-driven rationale frames the parenting role, encouraging investment in extracurricular activities for children. Thus, good parenting becomes analogous with the use of early learning educational apps
Marriage record of Frierson, P. L. and Holloway, Minnie V.
Marriage license for P. L. Frierson and Minnie V. Holloway. W.M. McDonald was the officiant
Marriage record of McDonald, John R. and Holloway, Texas L.
Marriage license for John R. McDonald and Texas L. Holloway. W.M. McDonald was the officiant
Marriage record of Brown, John L. and Holloway, Alice E.
Marriage license for John L. Brown and Alice E. Holloway. W.M. McDonald was the officiant
The Quantified Baby: Discourses of Consumption
Holloway, Mascheroni and Inglis adopt critical discourse analysis to examine commercial discourses about baby wearables and find that advertisements use a “discourse of risk and responsibilisation” to heighten parental anxiety over their babies’ health. This discourse positions parents as having sole responsibility for their babies’ health, safety and development, and constructs the digital tracking of babies’ bodies as a virtuous parental practice. Such neoliberal responsibilisation also creates a discursive bridge between goods previously used only in the health care system and everyday parenting practices, in line with the medicalisation of childhood. Moreover, the authors find that while such parenting practices and their representations contribute to normalise commercial and intimate surveillance practices, they also intersect with I-pistemology, where personal (mediated) knowledge replaces expert knowledge
Lophomilia striatipurpurea Holloway 1976
Lophomilia striatipurpurea Holloway, 1976 (Figs. 33, 34) Lophomilia striatipurpurea Holloway, 1976, Moths of Borneo with special reference to Mount Kinabalu: 16, Pl. 6: 68, fig. 104. Type-locality: Borneo, Sabah, Mt. Kinabalu, Power Station. Holotype: male, preserved in NHM, London. Material examined. Original description (Holloway 1976). The species is only known from the holotype. Diagnosis. L. striatipurpurea (Fig. 33) “resembles L. flaviplaga but differs in the proximity of the postmedial to the antemedial line on dorsum; lacks yellow tinge to dorsum of L. flaviplaga; L. flaviplaga lacks pale striations on veins and is generally redder in tint” (see Holloway 1976). Wingspan 26–28 mm. Judging from the illustration in the original description (Fig. 34), the structure of male genitalia is ancestral for the genus. All genitalia structures slender, the valva slightly constricted submedially, with small sacculus, saccular extension short and weak; clasper longitudinal, harpe not expressed. Aedeagus vesica lightly spined with a patch of broader spines. The female is unknown. Distribution and biology. (Fig. 60). Malaysia: Borneo, Sabah, Kinabalu Mt. The single specimen was collected in July (15.vii. 1965). The larvae and foodplant are unknown.Published as part of Kononenko, Vladimir & Behounek, Gottfried, 2009, A revision of the genus Lophomilia Warren, 1913 with description of four new species from East Asia (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae: Hypeninae), pp. 1-22 in Zootaxa 1989 on page 17, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.27465
Jack H. Holloway
Jack H. Holloway of Salem, Indiana, poses for his photograph wearing a sailor suit with short pants and high button shoes. The Bretzman customer card identified his father as Dr. H. B. Holloway of Salem, Indiana. A search of the 1920 Census records shows Dr. Harper B. and Jeanette L. Holloway as living in Salem, Indiana, with two sons, Jack H. age 6 and Louis G. age 4. This young boy appears to be about 5 years of age and is presumed to be Jack.This image is a preservation copy made from an unstable original nitrate negative. The image is part of Series III
Holloway, Catherine Lee (SC 1432)
Finding aid only for Manuscript Small Collection 1432. Paper written by WKU student Catherine L. Holloway for a history class, based on an interview with Elizabeth Holloway, Logan County, Kentucky. She chiefly tells about growing up in Logan County in the 1930s and 1940s
- …
