343 research outputs found

    Conley, "Recycled Things in Surrealist Collections - 2020"

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    A fascination with objects turned away from their original function lies at the root of surrealist thought. These fundamentally recycled things remained haunted by their previous uses, their former lives. The surrealists connected these objects with aspects of themselves, with the way humans can feel haunted by memories and dreams that lie dormant within them. André Breton, author of the “Manifestoes of Surrealism,” called this life force recycled objects share with humans “force fields,” awaiting activation by the admiring gaze of surrealist thinkers.1 Surrealists lived and worked with their things, going back to their first experiments with automatism conducted in Breton’s apartment, where they sat [2] surrounded by his collection. He already owned oddities discovered in Paris flea markets [3] when he first described the surrealist project as a quest for “revelation” through the “magic dictation” of automatism in 1922.2 The surrealists also prized objects that had had a ceremonial function in their culture of origin, which were available to them, thanks to French colonialism. They exaggerated those parts of the world from which the things they admired things came in their “surrealist map of the world” (1929). [4] When Breton declared « La beauté sera CONVULSIVE ou ne sera pas » at the end of Nadja (1928), he was partly describing the physical charge he felt in response to objects he chose for his collection, a visceral, experiential feeling linked to knowing and to wonder, « le merveilleux », a feeling reminiscent of the awe his baroque forebears found essential in their selection of things for their collections.3 Video presentation. Text is attached as supplemental/additional pdf file.Modern Languages & Literature

    Peace Chief: A Novel of the Real People

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    Piece Chief is the 8th of 12 novels in the Real People series by Robert J. Conley (1940-2014). "A young Indian's rise to a high position in the Cherokee nation. He is Young Puppy and through his eyes is seen a war between, on the one side, the Cherokee allied with the French and, on the other, the Indian slave-catchers working for the Spanish. By the author of War Woman." --Worldcat Summar

    Conclusions

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    The authors draw conclusions from the analysis carried out in the book, based on the reflections and outcomes achieved in the project ‘Close the Deal, Fill the Gap’, focused on the way that pay is ordered and structured in the three countries, Italy, Poland and UK, and in different sectors within those countries to enable a wider understanding of the GPG from the perspective of two contradictory forces: the arguably centralised EU imperative to reduce the GPG against the alternative impera- tive for increasingly decentralised collective bargaining and industrial rela- tions

    The Gender Pay Gap and Social Partnership in Europe

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    The analysis carried out in this book is based on the reflections and outcomes achieved in the project ‘Close the Deal, Fill the Gap’, focused on the way that pay is ordered and structured in the three countries, Italy, Poland and UK, and in different sectors within those countries to enable a wider understanding of the GPG from the perspective of two contradictory forces: the arguably centralised EU imperative to reduce the GPG against the alternative impera- tive for increasingly decentralised collective bargaining and industrial relations

    Author Spotlight on: Garrard Conley

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    Celebrate the publication achievements of this KSU faculty member! He will discuss his first novel, Boy Erased, and touch on the editing process for his upcoming second novel. This spotlight is the first in a series of events celebrating Fair Use Week 2021 with the KSU libraries

    On the two definitions of the Conley index

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    The two definitions of the homotopy equivalences between Conley index spaces of an isolated invariant set, the original one of Conley [C] as completed by the author in [K1] and the more recent definition of Salamon [S], are shown to define the same homotopy classes without reference to the difficult proof of [K1] showing the Conley index to be a connected simple system. The equivalences of the original definition are useful in describing certain geometric situations in terms of the index; examples are given.</p

    Witch of Goingsnake and Other Stories

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    "The Witch of Goingsnake and Other Stories" by Robert J. Conley (1940-2014) is a collection of short stories. One short story, "Yellowbird: An Imaginary Biography" won a Spur Award from the Western Writers of America. Amazon.com says: "Based on Cherokee history, oral storytelling, and personal experience, these stories, taken as a whole, reflect the depth of Cherokee historical experience and the range of contemporary Cherokee life. Several stories, including the one from which the collection takes its name, deal with the spiritual world. In the title story a man and his family are devastated by the evil powers of a tsigli, a witch. In other stories "medicine" is used to more constructive ends. Some of the stories feature human-animal transformations, the ability to become invisible, and the power to manipulate events. In the context of the Cherokee world such stories are not fantasies. They are stories about reality—the reality known to Cherokees.The collection also includes tales of Cherokee "outlaws," one of the most intriguing aspects of Cherokee history to Cherokees and non-Cherokees alike. Set in the days of Indian Territory, before Oklahoma statehood, these stories provide a taste of the wild West, seasoned with Cherokee cultural experience./ Still other stories describe modern-day Cherokees confronting the past and the present and continually struggling to find a place in the white people's world while maintaining a Cherokee belief system and way of life. Some Cherokees confront ignorant whites, others confront ignorant Cherokees, and still others simply make their own way, dealing with each other, with outsiders, with their environment, and with their spirituality in uniquely personal, albeit Cherokee, ways./ Clearly, these stories differ from stories that grow out of a European tradition, for behind them lie completely different cultural referents; different notions about interpreting events, time, and language; and a different view of the purpose and art of storytelling. Their author speaks with a clear Cherokee Indian voice to show how these cultural characteristics have survived centuries of abrupt change and to give readers an understanding of the fullness and humanity of the Cherokees as a people.

    Busy Bee

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    Sinclair Conley is an alumna of Lincoln Memorial University and future Doctor of Medicine in Dentistry with Appalachian American roots stretching back to the 1700s. The second academic and author in her family to bear the name ‘Sinclair’, she enjoys writing and playing with her dogs in her breaks between course work
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