3,813 research outputs found
Kerry Sacilotto
Kerry Sacilitto arrived in Darwin when she was nine years old with her parents Denis Jordan and Sandra May. She attended Stuart Park Primary School. She worked in real estate for nine years, mainly in property management, before her election to parliament at the 2005 Northern Territory election. A member of the Australian Labor Party, Kerry Sacilotto was elected to the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly as the Member for Port Darwin in 2005. She remained in the Assembly for one term only as she was defeated at the 2008 election. Sacilitto is currently a businesswoman who owns one of Darwin's real estate agency-Professionals. She was also elected as a Vice President of the Real Estate Institute of the Northern Territory.Business WomanPoliticia
Author-Illustrator
This essay investigates the concept author-illustrator by drawing on two influential essays – ‘Death of the Author’ by Roland Barthes and ‘What is an Author?’ by Michel Foucault. By engaging with the key points of debate that emerge from these positions, this essay argues that the notion of author-illustrator is part of a wider discursive field that is embedded in a complex, commodified, multimedia public sphere where the author is paradoxically reinscribed and erased. This environment is changing the nature of the text, authorship, and reader-text interaction, but until now the concept author-illustrator has been largely absent from these discussions
Dreamers of the Dark: Kerry Bolton and the Order of the Left Hand Path, a Case-study of a Satanic/Neo-Nazi Synthesis
In 1990 a small self-published journal/magazine called The Watcher was distributed among New Zealand's occult underground. The Watcher described itself as 'the New Zealand Voice of the Left Hand Path', and was published as the journal of the Order of the Left Hand Path. The Watcher and the Order directed its attentions towards those occultists who identified themselves as Satanists and, as such, the journal articulated a distinctly Satanic philosophy and perspective. However, as the journal evolved and developed, renaming itself as The Heretic and The Nexus in later years, there arose alongside Satanic philosophy an increasing emphases on what could be called esoteric Nazism or esoteric Nationalism. Given that the editor of The Watcher was Kerry Bolton, a man who has been immersed in New Zealand's Nationalist/neo-Nazi movement since the early 1970s, such an increasingly political orientation was perhaps unsurprising.
This thesis examines the way in which the Order bought Satanic and neo-Nazi ideologies together and the resulting synthesis. It also looks at the transition from being a Satanic order led by a neo-Nazi to an openly neo-Nazi Order that uses Satanic philosophy to justify and popularise its conception of National Socialism
Kerry Mills new barn dance : Kerry Mills wrote the official barn dance, this is his new one
Gift of Dr. Mary Jane Esplen.Piano [instrumentation]B flat [key]Tempo di barn dance [tempo]Popular piano ; dance [form/genre]Barn trees moon ; Kerry Mills (photograph) [illustration]De Takacs [engraver]Publisher's advertisement on inside front cover and back cover [note
Futurescan - Author Contact Details
Author names and affiliations for Futurescan: Mapping the Territory. Edited by Sally Wade and Kerry WaltonFebruary 2011ISBN: 978 1 907382 30 7The selected contributions and research papers for this publication were presented at the Foresight Centre, University of Liverpool, 17-18 November 2009.</div
Kerry Kennedy: Speak Truth to Power
Kerry Kennedy, author of the book Speak Truth To Power, highlights issues of human rights during times when the United States is recovering from terrorist attacks and engaging in war with Iraq. She frames her discussion within the notion of maintaining homeland security while upholding and valuing the civil rights of citizens. Women\u27s issues, particularly domestic violence, are mentioned as one area in which Americans are challenged to maintain nationalistic ideologies.
The daughter of Ethel Kennedy and the late Robert F. Kennedy, she served as executive director and is now on the board of directors of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial, a nonprofit organization she organized in 1988 that addresses the problems of social justice. She also directed the National Juvenile Justice Project, which helps cities create more effective and less costly programs for dealing with young offenders, and the RFK Journalism and RFK Book Awards, which recognize authors who prod the public conscience and expose the problems of the dispossessed.
Chair of the Amnesty International Leadership Council, Kennedy is a judge for the Reebok Human Rights Award and serves on the boards of Lawyers Committee for Human Rights and the Bloody Sunday Trust. She is a member of the Massachusetts and District of Columbia bar associations
Stories Shouldn\u27t Be Easy to Tell : A Chat With Author Kerry Neville
Kerry Neville’s just-released collection of short stories, Remember to Forget Me, is described as filled with “enormous compassion.” She lives in Georgia where she teaches at Georgia College and State University. Her first collection of stories, Necessary Lies, received the G.S. Sharat Chandra Prize in Fiction and was named a ForeWord Magazine Short Story Book of the Year. Her work has appeared in The Gettysburg Review, Epoch, and Triquarterly, and online in The Washington Post, The Huffington Post, and The Fix. She has twice been the recipient of the Dallas Museum of Art’s “Arts and Letters Prize for Fiction,” and has also been awarded the Texas Institute of Letters Kay Cattarulla Prize for the Short Story and the John Guyon Literary Nonfiction Prize from Crab Orchard Review
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