6,935 research outputs found
Cruel and Tender
Group exhibition. Artists:
Mel Cole, Sharon Leahy-Calrk, Kate Lyddon, Corinna Spencer, James Puman and Laura white.
Curated by Mel Cole
Verna Qualls, Sharon Carleton and Laura Mouton
Attending TSCW at Denton this year will be, left to right, Misses Laura Moulton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Moulton, Rt. 6; Verna Qualls, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. V. A. Qualls, 3744 Honeysuckle; and Sharon Carleton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Carleton, 1317 King\u27s Highway.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/21584/thumbnail.jp
Laura Di Trapani, Melissa Marsland and Sharon Niemczyk
Laura Di Trapani, Melissa Marsland and Sharon Niemczyk at the Center for the Moving Image Reunion at Portland State University Library.
Photographer: Scott Weberhttps://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cmi_oralphotos/1040/thumbnail.jp
From the IBPP Research Associates. Venezuela: Sharon Reimel de Carrasquel
The author, Sharon Reimel de Carrasquel, discusses the recently held presidential election in Venezuela
Dr. Sharon Feldman – Faculty Author Interview
Sharon Feldman, Professor of Spanish and Catalan Studies and Chair of the Department of Latin American and Iberian Studies discusses her new book, In the Eye of the Storm: Contemporary Theater in Barcelona. Barcelona is presently experiencing the most dynamic period in its modern theater history. This book describes some of the crucial moments and back stories, as well as some of the theatre companies and playwrights, that have shaped the theatrical life of the city of Barcelona in the aftermath of the Franco dictatorship
Letter from Sharon M. Tanihara, September 1990
Correspondence from Sharon Tanihara to Senator Daniel Inouye, Representative Norman Mineta, and Representative Robert Matsui regarding Tanihara's advocacy for amendments to the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 and her opinions on restitution payments for individuals previously excluded from that bill.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications
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Complex worlds, complex people: Auto-ethnographic conversations on decolonising the aftermath of death
In earlier work we raised the need to ‘decolonise bereavement studies’ (Hamilton et al., 2022). In this chapter we explore the complexities of what this might mean in terms of lived experiences. We move beyond individualised and psychologised perspectives of ‘bereavement and grief’, to consider the aftermath of death in the continuing lives of the living as deeply relational, experienced in everyday relationships of families and communities (Ribbens McCarthy et al., 2023). Our sociological lens draws attention to how such lived experiences are situated through institutionalised and racialised patterns of inequality and power. Yet, sociology as a discipline ‘hasn’t always addressed the …. global dimension [of structural inequalities] or the lasting impact of colonialism and empire’ (Bhambra, 2021).
By developing a collaborative auto-ethnographic conversational approach, we consider our historically and culturally situated identities as three women of diverse heritage, reflecting on our experiences of how our families and communities ‘do’ death and its aftermath. What emerged are experiences shaped by inter-generational colonial histories, which change over time and generations; experiences shaped by valued cultural and religious heritages, alongside current experiences of racism, inequalities, transnational mobility and rootedness.
Taking an intersectional lens, we consider how our legacies and biographies shaped our experiences of the aftermath of death. In the process we sometimes find ourselves surprised by the resonances between our experiences, but also what we learn further about the divergences. In this way, we seek to open nuanced spaces for opening up an enriching scenery in considering ‘bereavement’ landscapes
The Association Between Two Sensory Processing Measures: The Sensory Over-Responsivity Inventory and the Adolescent/Adult Sensory Profile
Abstract
Date Presented 3/31/2017
Concurrent validity between the Sensory Over-Responsivity Inventory and the Adolescent/Adult Sensory Profile was examined among 556 typical adults. Results indicate a moderate correlation between measures that varies across individual sensory systems.
Primary Author and Speaker: Michelle Kanda
Additional Authors and Speakers: Laura Ruzzano, Emily Cohen, Sharon Cermak</jats:p
Sharon historic building 013a
John Penoyer (stone part by Caulkins)Miss Laura Wheeler (family bought in 1880)East side of Route 41 (Sharon St., 0.1 m., north of Governor Smith Mansion
Sharon historic building 013
John Penoyer (stone part by Caulkins)Miss Laura Wheeler (family bought in 1880)East side of Route 41 (Sharon St., 0.1 m., north of Governor Smith Mansion
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