8,433 research outputs found

    [William Morris Hughes, daughter Helen and unidentified boat passengers] [picture].

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    Part of the William Morris Hughes Collection.; Helen Hughes identified by researcher.; W.M. and Helen Hughes are in left foreground.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3070657

    Joanne, Helen, and Joyce Hughes by the garden at Marr's Plantation

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    Description on back: L to R, Joanne Hughes, Helen Hughes, Joyce Hughes

    Joanne, Helen, and Joyce Hughes on a bench at Marr's Plantation

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    Description on back: L to R, Joanne Hughes, Helen Hughes, Joyce Hughes

    Helen Hughes

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    Helen Hughes poses for a portrait

    On Andrew Kötting's Mapping Perception

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    In this chapter Hughes identifies Andrew Kötting’s collaborative film Mapping Perception (1998–2002) as an innovative experimental documentary about disability that is still worth viewing today. She develops an interpretation of the film that focuses on the performance of Andrew Kötting’s daughter Eden, who was diagnosed with Joubert syndrome as a baby. The collaboration between the scientists and the artistically gifted Kötting family is viewed as the kind of investigation into dis/ability proposed by Michael Schillmeier in his book Rethinking Disability. The complex manipulation of the aesthetics of filmmaking becomes meaningful through the representation of Eden reflecting on her own life, her articulation of the words that describe her condition and her own agency as a disabled person responding to the demands of the filming process

    [William Morris Hughes, wife Mary, daughter Helen?, and three unidentified men standing in front of motor car] [picture].

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    Part of the William Morris Hughes Collection.; Possible identity of girl provided by researcher.; Left to right: ?, William Morris Hughes, Helen?, Dame Mary, ?,?.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3070638

    Hughes family on steps of Marr's Plantation home

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    Description on back: L to R, Helen Jones Hughes, Marianne Hughes, Winfield Scott Hughes, Perry Bryce Hughes Sr., Helen Joanne Hughes, Annie Mae Scott Hughes

    A conversation with Helen Hughes

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    Helen Hughes was a founding member of the International Advisory Board of the Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy. She has been a leading thinker in development economics, especially in Asia Pacific economies. Helen Hughes was one of the few development economists to have foreseen the rapid transformation of East Asian economies in the 1960s. This interview with Helen Hughes, Distinguished Fellow of the Economic Society of Australia, was conducted in September 2006. It is a characteristically frank and open account of her career, her achievements in the profession and work at the World Bank

    John Nixon: a communist artist

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    Helen Hughes and Lorna Murray

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    Helen Hughes and Lorna Murray, friends, are pictured together
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