12,583 research outputs found

    Walter Mason interviewed by Kay Saunders, 10 Jul 1989

    No full text
    The Queensland Homefront Collection consists of taped interviews conducted by Dr. Kay Saunders and others, correspondence with informants, printout of database. The Queensland Homefront 1939-1945 Oral History Project was funded by The University of Queensland Foundation and led by Dr Kay Saunders, Reader in the Department of History at the University of Queensland. A book entitled "Australia's frontline: remembering the 1939-1945 war" was published as a result of the project

    Kay Williams' Graduate Recital

    No full text
    Original Format: ReelComposers in the graduate recital: Beethoven; Debussy; Chopin; ShostakovitchRecital: Pian

    Interview of author Walter Satterthwait

    No full text
    Walter Satterthwait, author of a series of contemporary crime novels, talks about his protagonists Joshua Croft and Rita Mondragon, and his novels set in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Satterthwait describes how he came to writing crime stories and why he chose to use a Latina as a main character. He describes his exposure to different cultures, his childhood of frequent moves, how he came to writing, and how he developed his characters. Satterthwait is interviewed by Diana Rivera at the 2005 Left Coast Crime Conference held in El Paso, Texas

    Wake up, wake up, you drowsy sleeper,

    No full text
    voiceCollected by Kay White Transcribed by M. C. Parler Mrs. Walter Elam Morrillton, Ark. May 1, 1962 Reel 414, Item 20 Drowsy Sleeper Wake up, wake up, you drowsy sleeper, Wake up, wake up, it's almost day, How can you lie and sleep and slumber, And your true lover working away?Funding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation

    Anuson Walter Vella

    No full text
    Cremation volume for Vella, Walter F. (Walter Francis), 1924-1980, American author on Thailand; comprises condolences and papers on Thailand by both crematee and others

    Walter Benjamin, a Methodological Contribution

    No full text
    This article examines the work and philosophy of Walter Benjamin as an important source of information for international relations (IR) and International Political Sociology (IPS) scholars, particularly in light of his methodological contributions, which could provide important ground for movements such as the aesthetic turn in IR and everyday life ⁄ popular culture studies within IR and IPS. Benjamin’s contributions are examined in light of his most controversial, albeit unfinished, project— The Arcades Project, a recently published volume that focuses on a selection of documents from the Benjamin archive; and a study by Howard Caygill on Benjamin’s attempt to create a ‘‘new philosophy,’’ and along with it, a new methodology for studying ‘‘experience.’’ The article focuses on three main elements that stand at the basis of Benjamin’s unique methodology: (1) his process of selecting the object of study; (2) his treatment of temporality and processes of change ⁄ history; and (3) his focus on the visual as key to escaping the limitations of traditional ‘‘philosophical’’ text
    corecore