2,340 research outputs found
Suzanne Larson, film juvenile
Suzanne Larson, film juvenileTo order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see:
http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction
Please cite the Order NumberScanned at 600ppi with an Epson 20000 flatbed scanner. Image then rotated, cropped, level-adjusted, and sharpened using Photoshop CS3. Converted to a JPEG2000 image upon ingest into CONTENTdm
Frank Moorhouse interviewed by Suzanne Hayes
While at the Adelaide Festival of Arts in 1980, Australian author Frank Moorhouse spoke with Suzanne Hayes of the Adelaide college of Technical and Further Education (TAFE) about his techniques in fiction, the subject matter of his first four works of fiction, his attitude to expatriate authors and other aspects of his writing life
Suzanne Calder
The Larson Studio Collection contains portraits and landscape photographs from Thomas Larson and his son O. Blaine Larson, who operated the Larson Studio in Provo, Utah County, Utah
Suzanne Reed
The Larson Studio Collection contains portraits and landscape photographs from Thomas Larson and his son O. Blaine Larson, who operated the Larson Studio in Provo, Utah County, Utah
Suzanne Larsen
The Larson Studio Collection contains portraits and landscape photographs from Thomas Larson and his son O. Blaine Larson, who operated the Larson Studio in Provo, Utah County, Utah
Realism analysis in Suzanne Collin's "Mockingjay"
in this novel, the writer found kinds of realism viewed that were from moral realism. they are moral requirement hypothetical imperative (MRHI), values and secondary qualities (VASQ), virtues and reasons (VAR). the writer found the author way to perform realism in Suzanne Collin's novel "Mockingjay". from the moral requirement hypothetical imperative Katniss join in the arena to fight district from the president Snow., the second kind is values and secondary qualities where this actions is just known by herself. and virtues and reasons, Katniss did something for nations because social need it.vii, 42 page
The Hothouse Archives
The ICI Berlin in conjunction with the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science is pleased to announce an exhibition by visual artist and theorist Suzanne Anker. The Hothouse Archives brings together two groups of photographs that picture the blurring of boundaries between nature and culture. The first suite of pictures, ‘Coral Seed Bank’ (2007) capture fragments of brain corals suspended in tanks located at the Mote Marine Laboratory at Summerland Key, Florida. The morphology of coral, similar to the convolutions in the brain, create vital connections between all parts of the organism. The vivid colors are a natural wonder, rendering this stationary carnivore as a masquerading plant. In the second suite of photographs, ‘Laboratory Life’ several layers of images are superimposed on top of one another in the form of a palimpsest. Images garnered from scientific laboratories form the technological base layer. An image of a transparent garden is then transferred as a top layer. The chance provoke questions concerning our enchantment with both nature and technology.
Suzanne Anker (www.geneculture.org) has exhibited her work at the J. P. Getty Museum, the Kunsthaus Meran, the Phillips Collection, the Institute for Art and Urban Resources in NY among others. She has been a guest curator at the New York Academy of Sciences as well as the author of many texts concerning the implications of the bio-technological revolution on culture and society. She currently teaches at the School of Visual Arts in NYC, where she is Chair of the Fine Arts Department
Interview with YA author and Children‘s Editorial Assistant Suzanne Sutherland
An interview with Young Adult author Suzanne Sutherland. The interview focuses on Toronto, the straight edge scene, music and subculture, Sutherland\u27s first book, When We Were Good and the importance of queer representation in YA books. Sutherland also recommends a number of YA novels
KS: SUZANNE HALL
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: Suzanne Hall London School of Economics and Political Science (London, UK) Suzanne Hall is Director of the Cities Programme and an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Her research explores the intersection of global migration and urban marginalisation. Through an ESRC award she has focused on migrant economies and spaces on urban high streets across the UK. Suzi is author of City, Street and Citizen: The..
Knowledge Production, Public Media and Adult Education and Learning:How the OECD’S PIAAC survey enters the press discourse in Italy and Denmark
This paper presents a comparative analysis of the way the ‘Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies’ (PIAAC), developed and managed by the OECD, entered the popular press discourse in Italy and Denmark over the period 2013-2019. The press contributes to knowledge production by presenting information structured from criteria of news value and from ideological stances. Our analysis, done as part of the ENLIVEN research project (Milana et al, 2020), investigates how PIAAC results were covered in Italian and Danish newspapers and used in the construction of themes, angles, and ‘truths’ on adult learning
- …
