2,834 research outputs found

    Alumni Authors: Denise Hamilton \u2781

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    Alumni Authors Series - Spring 2012. The William H. Hannon Library was happy to celebrate some of our acclaimed literary alumnus. Each author discussed their newest works and share a few stories from their days at LMU. Denise Hamilton (\u2781) - Former Los Angeles Times journalist and Fulbright Scholar Denise Hamilton is known for high-octane crime novels with romantic suspense set in contemporary, multicultural Los Angeles. Her debut The Jasmine Trade was a finalist for the prestigious John Creasey Dagger Award given by the Crime Writers\u27 Assn. Denise is also the editor of Los Angeles Noir, an anthology of new writing that spent two months on bestseller lists, won an Edgar® Award for Best Short Story and the Southern California Independent Booksellers\u27 award for Best Mystery of the Year. Denise has written five books in the Eve Diamond series. Her standalone The Last Embrace set in the Hollywood of 1949, was compared to James Ellroy and Raymond Chandler. Denise\u27s new novel, Damage Control, will be published by Scribner in September 2011. In her spare time, Denise also writes a monthly perfume column for the Los Angeles Times called Uncommon Scents

    Denise Monson

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    Photograph - Denise Monson in front of a house at Calling River, Alberta. Her father ran the Telegraph Office ther

    Denise Duhamel, 19th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Denise Duhamel\u27s book of poetry based on Inuit mythology, The Woman with Two Vaginas, (Salmon Run Press, 1995) was censored in both Canada and Alaska. She is also the author of Kinky (Orchard Press, forthcoming 1997), Girl Soldier (Garden Street Press, 1996), Smile! (Warm Spring Press 1993), and four chapbooks, the most recent of which is How the Sky Fell (Pearl Editions). Her work has appeared in literary magazines such as American Poetry Review, Ploughshares, Partisan Review, and Ontario Review, and anthologies including The Best American Poetry 1994 and The Best American Poetry 1993

    ESP Across Cultures

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    This present volume constitutes the third online edition of ESP Across Cultures. The decision to change from a paper-based to an online edition has undoubtedly been beneficial in terms of enjoying greater visibility within the international academic community. One thing that has not changed over the years, however, since the inception of the journal in 2004, has been the policy of double-blind peer reviewing, which means that only a selected number of the papers submitted end up as being published. There are seven papers in the current issue, each one analysing a particular aspect of English for Specific Purposes from a cross-cultural perspective. The first paper, by Hmoud S. Alotaibi, focuses on research article introductions in Arabic, analysing the extent to which scholars writing in Arabic in the sphere of education adhere to the CARS (Create A Research Space) model delineated by John Swales which was elaborated in particular with regard to the academic conventions widely adopted in the English-speaking world. Instead of restricting the investigation to the introductory section as past studies in this field did, the author examines all of the subheadings and he concludes that all introductions include Move 2 in a subheading entitled the Problem of the Study, a result that contradicts previous findings where the paucity of Move 2 was common in non-English RAs, and especially in Arabic ones. Patrizia Anesa analyses the websites of the main arbitration centres operating in Asia from a textual perspective to define how they are discursively constructed and can be used as promotional tools, thereby helping us to evaluate the importance assumed by internationalization processes or by local cultural elements in promoting a particular centre as a seat for international arbitration. She concludes that while some scholars argue that we are witnessing the ‘Asianization’ of arbitration, with the increasing bargaining power of Asian parties, on the other hand a phenomenon of ‘Universal Arbitration’ is also emerging, i.e. a form of convergence of how disputes are resolved so that parties of any nationality can operate in the same way with ever fewer language barriers. In their paper, Mahmood Reza Atai and Fatemeh Asadnia examine the communicative and promotional function of university homepages by looking at the ‘university overview’, ‘university mission statement’, and ‘university introduction at a glance’ genres, using a corpus of 210 texts selected from homepages of the top 500 universities ranked by the Academic Ranking of World Universities. The findings demonstrated that the three genres shared communicative purposes, functional units, certain moves and steps, socio-academic contexts, and discourse community members that led to the formation of a genre set. Gaetano Falco explores ways of using comics in an MA course on translation of economic texts as a means of stimulating the interest of language students with no economics skills in order to introduce economics-related lexis and improve thematic competence in general. He observes that empirical research has shown that films and comics can indeed be useful resources to teach economic translation to students with no skills in economics. However, the author warns that the use of comics for educational purposes may have its drawbacks, e.g. when students deal with complex sign systems which embody complex economic concepts, where often the humorous element is lost. In her paper, Irina Khoutyz describes the differences in how scholars present their findings in research articles (RA) in international journals in English and in Beyza Björkman Christian Burgers Jan Chovanec Anda-Elena Cretiu Erika Dalan John Douthwaite Hanem El-Farahaty Said Faiq Silvia Ferreri Inmaculada Fortanet-Gómez Pedro Fuertes-Olivera Giuliana Garzone Christoph Hafner Ruba Khamam Anna Loiacono Geraldine Ludbrook John McRae Susan Petrilli Silvia Pireddu Tarja Salmi-Tolonen Jeffrey Segrave Charlotte Taylor Margherita Ulrych John Kenneth White Jessica Williams I hope you will enjoy the current issue of this journal and will make the most of the free access to all past issues. Christopher Williams (Chief Editor) 6 FOREWORD local journals in Russian. She then looks into the reasons for these differences, seeking explanations from the sociocultural contexts in which these RAs were written, as well as providing advice to local authors as to how to make their RAs more competitive at the international level. The differences include the apparent lack of structure of Russian RAs with respect to English RAs; the tendency in Russian authors not to specify the purpose in writing a paper; and the tendency of Russian authors to present the methodology used in less detail compared with English RAs. Luisella Leonzini investigates the use of verbal and visual metaphors in economic- media discourse within the context of the euro crisis by studying the correlation between linguistic and pictorial metaphors and text-image intersemiotic relations. The research is based on a cross-analysis of English and Italian editorial articles published between 2009 and 2012. In both corpora, metaphorical realizations frame the economic crisis which hit the single currency and the eurozone in 2009 as a partial collapse and hint at a possible return to stability in the form of a recovery. The aim of this paper is to analyse the collapse/caduta and recovery/ripresa metaphors across languages in the press. Ian Robinson reports on using corpus linguistics to aid students in writing a creative text. He looks at the available literature to help understand what is meant by ‘creativity’. A worksheet was prepared using a corpus linguistic analysis of modern, English versions of the stories of the Brothers Grimm. This worksheet was constructed with the use of a specialized corpus, and a stop-list was created which contained single words as well as word clusters found in the tales. Students were then asked to select some of these words and phrases to help them write stories which were then analysed, and a follow-up questionnaire was used to elicit the students’ perceptions concerning creativity. The author concludes that creativity is essential in EFL and that it is something to be fostered in students

    Survey of seeps and springs within the Bureau of Land Management's Grand Junction Field Office Management Area (Garfield County, CO)

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    Includes Addendum: Roan Creek seeps and springs survey / prepared by: Joe Rocchio, Denise Culver, and Georgia Doyle.Prepared for: Bureau of Land Management, Grand Junction Field Office.June 30, 2001.Addendum has date: June 13, 2002.Includes bibliographical references

    Protected Open Space Inventory: Readington Township, Hunterdon County, New Jersey

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    This document provides an inventory of open space in Readington Township including parkland, conservation easements, rights of way, public land, semi-public land, and farmland. The project examines the need to consider the planning of open space protection for the future as opposed to letting the current trend of sprawling development continue. It also highlights possible linkages of open space that could improve the use of larger green ways and enhance natural resource areas

    Gas Imaginary Conversations No. 1 — with Denise Ferreira da Silva

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    Below the Radar has partnered with the Or Galley to bring you recordings of the Gas Imaginary Conversations series. In this first of two talks, Rachel O\u27Reilly is in conversation with Denise Ferreira da Silva. This event was presented by the Or Gallery and recorded virtually on Nov. 26, 2020.Rachel O\u27Reilly and Denise Ferreira da Silva have had long-standing exchanges on the many concepts and references that run through the Gas Imaginary project. In this conversation, they address the development of The Gas Imaginary and the language of capitalization in regards to land, settler conceptualism, and the violent movement of land to forms of property and sites of speculation-based capital.About The Gas Imaginary:A multi-disciplinary project using poetry, collaborative drawings, installation, moving images, and lectures to unpack the broader significance of \u27settler conceptualism\u27, the racial logic of the property form and fossil fuel-based labour politics as capital reaches the limits of land use. In ongoing dialogue with elders of Gooreng Gooreng country and settler women activists, where fracking was approved for mass installation in \u27Australia\u27, new elements of this work address the threatened destruction to 50% of the Northern Territory. — The Gas Imaginary Project page: https://thegasimaginary.orgalleryprojects.org/ — Or Gallery Exhibition page:  http://www.orgallery.org/past/814/the-gas-imaginary— Rachel O\u27Reilly: www.rachel-oreilly.net — Dr. Denise Ferreira da Silva: https://grsj.arts.ubc.ca/person/denise-ferreira-da-silva/ Watch the video recording of this conversation here (closed captioning included in video): https://thegasimaginary.orgalleryprojects.org/talks

    Denise Green (Art Forum)

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    Denise Green is an artist and author of the book "Metonymy in contemporary art". She speaks about her art and the concept of metonymy

    Rare plant monitoring Lakeview BLM District, 2018

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    "During the spring and summer of 2018, we monitored 18 plant species (15 vascular, three non-vascular) listed as special status species (SSS) in the Bureau of Land Management's (BLM) Lakeview Resource Area. Approximately 2,000 acres were surveyed and 12 of the 18 target species were observed over the survey period stretching from April 11th to June 26th"--Executive summary.report to the Bureau of Land Management, Lakeview District ; report prepared by Meaghan I. Petix, Matt A. Bahm, A. Lisa Schomaker, and Denise E.L. Giles.Title from PDF caption (viewed on February 4, 2022).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references (page 12).Mode of access: Internet from the State Library of Oregon U.S. Government Publications Collection.Text in English
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