7,733 research outputs found

    Letter from Sophia Wright Cage, Jackson, to Mother, July 3, 1855

    No full text
    The last page of this letter is a note from Kate to Aunty (Mary Wright)

    Supplementary material: Document similarity analysis

    No full text
    These files contain supplementary data generated in response to peer review. Peer reviewers requested that we compare online and other kinds of journalistic content, to see if there were any differences in the extent to which digital media related to the emergency imaginary. K-means clustering indicated that there seemed to be a closer relationship between digital media and the emergency imaginary, so we sought to explore why this might be. One hypothesis, drawn from previous research, was that "emergency" reporting was informed by a group of major 'Western' wire agencies, known for their "on the spot" reporting - Agence France Presse, Associated Press, and Thomson Reuters. However, since that research was conducted, other non-Western agencies, such as Xinhua and Interfax, have grown considerably. So, we divided our original corpus of news texts into digital and non-digital content per country, and conducted document similarity tests between these corpora and the copy produced by a selection of wire agencies. The file “similarity_analysis.xlsx” shows the results of that analysis. The variable “to.Vprop” is the measure of document similarity, as indicated by the RNewsflow package. It is the percentage of media items in our corpus from a given country/type of media that were very similar or identical to previously published copy from one of our selected wire agencies. In the written article, we mapped out which wire agencies were dominant in the media content disseminated by outlets in specific countries. In file “all_similarities.xlsx” we present the results of the same analysis for all news sources in the sub-corpus. It includes 245 sources from 20 countries. For each news source, the variable “to.Vprop” measures the percentage of articles in the “from” column that are identical or highly similar to those in the column “to.” Finally, the file “sources_corpus.xlsx” contains details of the sources we used for this analysis, which country they were from, how we classified them (digital/not digital) and how many media items were included in this analysis

    Keywords voted on by expert panel

    No full text
    To identify suitable keywords relating to the interpretative frame of the 'emergency imaginary', the lead author conducted a content analysis of Craig Calhoun's work on the subject. She drew up a list of most frequently mentioned words relating to three key aspects of this interpretative frame: the definition of problem (listed in Table 1), the imperative to act swiftly (listed in Table 2) and the recommended treatment to address the problem (listed in Table 3). Next, we approached five experts, who have published extensively on humanitarian communication (Lilie Chouliaraki, Glenda Cooper, Simon Cottle, Jonathan Corpus Ong, and Matthew Powers). We asked these scholars to select and rank the words from each list that they thought were most relevant for each dimension of the emergency imaginary .This took place in 2022. The keywords chosen by the panel in relation to each dimension were: ? The problem: "crisis", "disaster" ? The imperative to act swiftly: "now", "sudden", "urgent". ? Recommended treatment: "help", "rescue", "save". These keywords were then used to engage in a la carte (ALC) word embedding. Specifically, we generated country-level estimates of closeness between the word "humanitarian*" and the different dimensions of the emergency imaginary. For each dimension, we computed how "close" (measured in cosine similarity) the keywords were to the word "humanitarian*."Word documen

    Kate Ward and Kate Renault

    No full text
    ANU Reporter Photos - Poets' Lunch, ANUTECH Literary Prize Winners, Australian University Teaching Awards, etc. - Prof. F. H. (Fred) Gruen, Anne Edgeworth, Paul Hetherington, Craig Cormick, Kate Regnault, Kate Ward, Dr. Alex Zelinsky, Judith Wright, Prof. R. Duncan, Dr. A. Greig, Prof. Ralph Elliott, Kate Regnault, Kate Ward & other

    Transforming the University of Minnesota: Final Recommendations of the Task Force on Undergraduate Reform: Student Support

    No full text
    Maple, Kate; Wright, Robin. (2006). Transforming the University of Minnesota: Final Recommendations of the Task Force on Undergraduate Reform: Student Support. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/162577

    Kate Bornstein - Author, Artist, and Advocate for Teens, Freaks, and Other Outlaws

    No full text
    Sex, Bullies, and You Kate Bornstein is an author, playwright, and performance artist whose work to date has been in service to sex positivity, gender anarchy, and to building a coalition of those who live on cultural margins. Hir work recently earned hir an award from the Stonewall Democrats of New York City, and two citations from New York City Council members. Hir latest book is Hello, Cruel World: 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks, and Other Outlaws. Other published works include the books Gender Outlaw: On Men, Women and the Rest of Us; My Gender Workbook; and the cyber-romance-action novel Nearly Roadkill, with co-author Caitlin Sullivan. Kate\u27s plays and performance pieces include Strangers in Paradox; Hidden: A Gender; The Opposite Sex Is Neither; Virtually Yours; and y2kate: gender virus 2000. Hir memoir, Kate Bornstein Is a Queer and Pleasant Danger, is due out in 2011. Kate\u27s books are taught in over 150 colleges and universities around the world; and ze has performed hir work live on college campuses and in theaters and performance spaces across the United States, as well as in Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, and Austria. Ze is currently touring colleges, youth conferences, and high schools, speaking and leading workshops on the subjects of sex, gender, and alternatives to teen suicide. According to daily email and Twitter, the book is still helping people stay alive. Kate was born outside of Fargo, North Dakota. Hir father was a Lutheran minister, and hir mother was Miss Betty Crocker, 1939. Kate has lived in the queer ghettos of Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Seattle. Ze currently lives with hir partner—sex pioneer, writer, and performance artist Barbara Carrellas—in New York City, along with their pug, three cats, and turtle. Bornstein\u27s interests include iTunes, Photoshop, traveling, death, and anything Mac. Editor\u27s Note: Kate Bornstein, a self-described gender outlaw, uses gender-neutral pronouns in her bio. In keeping with her wishes, we have retained her use of ze instead of she and hir instead of her in the following bio. Co-sponsored by the Rainbow Alliancehttps://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/archives_presidential_lecture_series/1027/thumbnail.jp

    SUPERSEDED - Codebook used to categorise media shown in corpus metadata

    No full text
    ## This item has been replaced by the one which can be found at https://doi.org/10.7488/ds/7709 ## Codebook detailing how media items were coded in corpus metadata file. Details codes used for country, source, continent, medium, type of media, geographic market/reach, and ownership/funding model.This codebook describes the codes used in the corpus metadata file (FullCorpusMetadata.xlsx)

    Summary of data retrieval process

    No full text
    This file contains a detailed discussion of how we went about corpus construction, with a particular focus on data retrieval. It discusses our use of Nexis and Factiva, Google and GDELT (via API), as well as the web scraping procedures used.This is a summary of the data retrieval process used in corpus construction, including the data included in our matrix, entitled 'Global English Language Corpus of Humanitarian News.

    Wright, Kate

    No full text
    Francis Wright - husband. Register states death date as 9/9/1940.https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-ch-memoranda-1940/1552/thumbnail.jp
    corecore