1,879 research outputs found
Diane Long Hoeveler, Gothic Feminism : The Professionalization of Gender from Charlotte Smith to the Brontës
Leduc Guyonne. Diane Long Hoeveler, Gothic Feminism : The Professionalization of Gender from Charlotte Smith to the Brontës. In: XVII-XVIII. Bulletin de la société d'études anglo-américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles. N°54, 2002. pp. 205-209
L'entrée en scène du danseur : Rite(s) de passage(s)
Danseurs-chercheurs, chercheurs-danseurs, Diane Leduc et Mario Thibodeau ont tous deux mis au centre de leur recherche universitaire le travail du danseur, avec la volonté de mieux en saisir les dynamiques internes. Mario Thibodeau revient ainsi sur son expérience de Premier Danseur au sein des ballets de Montréal dans une perspective psychologique, tandis que Diane Leduc tente elle une approche phénoménologique du travail de l'interprète en danse contemporaine. Deux perspectives, qui explore..
Recherche et enseignement en architecture, génie architectural, urbanisme : Influences et complémentarités
Quand la recherche nourrit l'enseignement, quand l’enseignement impacte la recherche, des ponts se construisent. De part et d’autre, une intention commune : comprendre le monde par le traitement des savoirs. Lire la suite Quand la recherche nourrit l'enseignement, quand l’enseignement impacte la recherche, des ponts se construisent. De part et d’autre, une intention commune : comprendre le monde par le traitement des savoirs. Comme le décrit Diane Leduc dans son introduction, les enseignants-chercheurs poursuivent une double finalité : résoudre des problèmes et créer de nouveaux savoirs, d’une part, et transformer les savoirs en situations d’apprentissage, d’autre part. Dans cet ouvrage collectif, les articles sont répartis en trois parties, chacune symbolisant un type de ponts : les ponts assurant des connexions directes entre enseignement et recherche, les ponts ancrés dans l’expérimentation et pouvant mener à des retombées sur le plan de l'enseignement et, enfin, les ponts entre différentes disciplines, qui permettent de dégager des hybridations de savoirs sur l’espace et le construit
Diane Zinna, 45th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Diane Zinna is the author of THE ALL-NIGHT SUN (Random House, 2020) which was longlisted for The Center for Fiction\u27s First Novel Prize and the Cabell First Novelist Award. She received her MFA from the University of Florida and was the longtime membership director for AWP, The Association of Writers & Writing Programs. There, she created the Writer to Writer Mentorship Program, helping to match more than six hundred writers over twelve seasons. She is also the creator of Grief Writing Sundays, a popular writing class on telling difficult stories that has met every week since the start of the pandemic. Diane is the recipient of an ArtsFairfax Artist Grant, and beginning Fall 2022, she will be the Darden Professor of Creative Writing at Old Dominion University. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming at Electric Literature, LiteraryHub, Brevity, Monkeybicycle, and Eat, Darling, Eat. Diane lives in Fairfax, Virginia, with her husband, daughter, and doodle
Graduate recital, soprano. Paul, Marylynn, 1980
Recorded during a live performance at Oakland Recital Hall, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan, November 16, 1980, the 84th concert of the Department of Music’s 1980-1981 season.Marylynn Paul, soprano ; Thea Hibma Hoekman, piano ; Diane Driggs LeDuc, violin.In partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Music degree in vocal performance, Western Michigan University, 1980.Information from performance program.Reel 1: Le nozze di Figaro. Voi che sapete / Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart -- Come away, come sweet love ; Flow, my tears ; Now cease thy wandering eyes ; If my complaints ; Say, love, if ever thou dids't find / John Dowland -- Le bonheur est chose legere / Camille Saint-Saëns -- Spanisches Liederbuch. Nun wandre Maria / Hugo Wolf.Reel 2: Die ihr schwebet ; Ach, des Knaben Augen ; Fuhr mich, Kind, nach Bethlehem / Hugo Wolf -- Goethe-Lieder. Epiphanias / Hugo Wolf -- Emily Dickinson songs. Out of the morning ; I'm nobody ; When the hills do ; The grass / Vincent Persichetti -- La boheme. Donde lieta / Giacomo Puccini
Author Diane Glancy discusses her first movie project and reads from a journal she is keeping about her experiences as a novice movie maker
Noted author Diane Glancy discusses her first movie project and reads from a journal she is keeping about her experiences as a novice movie maker. After showing a clip from the still unfinished movie (not included here), she takes questions from the audience. Introduced by MSU Anthropology Professor Susan Applegate Krouse. Part of the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Writers Series
Leslie Behm interviews science fiction writer Diane Carey
Author Diane Carey talks about how she came to write science fiction books for the "Star Trek" series, about the business of freelance writing, being a dependable writer, and being fortunate to have found a genre which she enjoys and is in demand. Carey is interviewed by Leslie Behm for the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Science Fiction Writers Series
Diane Wakoski, 4th Annual ODU Literary Festival
One of the two or three most important poets of her generation in America, wrote Hayden Carruth about the extremely prolific and talented Diane Wakoski. Author of more than a dozen full-length collections and as many chapbooks, Wakoski is considered one of the most poetically daring writers on the American scene. While she frequently writes about the difficulty of being a woman in an age of changing values, her range encompasses an array of contemporary subject matters and themes. Since 1962, when her first book of poetry appeared, Wakoski has continued to draw her ever-growing readership into the complex world created by her vision
Diane Ackerman, 15th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Diane Ackerman, poet and nature writer, has cavorted with whales in Argentina, studied bats in the deserts of Texas, and scouted out rare albatrosses on Japan\u27s Torishima Island. Her non-fiction bestseller, A Natural History of the Senses, is a meticulously researched celebration of hearing, vision, smell, taste and touch. Her Jaguar of Sweet Laughter: New and Selected Poems was named a Notable Book of the Year in 1991 by the New York Times Book Review. She is also the author of Reverse Thunder, a dramatic poem on the life of a sixteenth century Mexican nun, Sister Juana Ines de la Cruz, from which the staged reading for the Literary Arts Festival has been adaped
Diane Ackerman
Diane Ackerman visited The College at Brockport in April 2000. She is a poet, essayist, and naturalist.Archived web contentSUNY BrockportWriters Forum Author Photo
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