6,504 research outputs found
Anne Edna Willis Lewis Collection - Accession 1209
The Anne Edna Willis Lewis Collection consists of materials collected by Anne Edna Willis Lewis (1902-2001) during her academic career at Winthrop College from 1921-1925. She graduated as part of the Winthrop Class of 1925. Her collection consists of 11 reports cards, 2 photographs taken at her 50th reunion, and a scrapbook containing photographs, programs, correspondence, tickets, invitations, newspaper clippings memorabilia, and commencement programs. A Winthrop scholarship was named in her and her husband’s honor titled the Anne W. Lewis and Robert M. Lewis Endowed Scholarship to assist academically talented students with financial need.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/1963/thumbnail.jp
Anne M. Lewis
Anne M. Lewis receives an award for five years of service in Academic Affairs. (l-r) President William Perry, Anne M. Lewis, Provost Blair Lord.https://thekeep.eiu.edu/years_of_service_2013/1022/thumbnail.jp
Anne M. Lewis
Anne M. Lewis, 10 years of service, with President David Glassman and Lynette Drake, Interim Vice President for Student Affairshttps://thekeep.eiu.edu/years_of_service_2018/1042/thumbnail.jp
Earl Lewis Papers: Correspondence, 1960-2000
Folder containing correspondence received or written by Dr. Earl Lewis. Includes letters from Wilhelmina Sampson (pages 1-2); Crawford C. Martin (page 3); David Easton (page 4); Milton Leech (page 6); Shirley E. Jackson (page 7); Maud W. Keeling (page 8); Lyman E. Gregory (page 9); Bernice Milburn Moore (page 10); Duncan Wimpress (pages 11-13); Joan C. Gould (page 14); Craig A. Washington (page 15); Rowland J. Martin (page 16); Robert W. Calvert (pages 17-18, 25); Mavis Bryant (page 19); Dolph Briscoe (page 20); Kathryn Brantley (page 21); Clark C. Munroe (page 22); Sister Elizabeth Anne Sueltenfuss, CDP (page 23); Norman J. Johnson (page 24); C.J. Collins (page 26); Thomas P. Sellers (page 28); Rochell Brown, Jr. (pages 29-31); J. Rolando Bono (pages 32-33); Mark S. Phillips (page 35); Ronald Calgaard (pages 36, 45); Charles C. Butt (page 37); James S. Vinson and Michele T. Myers (page 38); Brian A. Joseph (page 39); William H. Hansell, Jr. (pages 40-41, 46); Gloria "Jo" Floyd (page 42); Donald J. Borut (page 43); John E. Kerrigan (page 44); B. Bernadette Bettard (page 48); Louise J. Agnese (page 50); Sharon Lynn Kagan (page 51); Joe Krier (pages 52-53, 55); Debra A. Lauer (page 54); Margaret Amini (page 56); Enrique G. Hernandez (page 57); Ron Kirk (page 58-59); Mrs. Paul Cendric Wenger, Jr. (pages 66-67); Maurice Woodard (page 68); Willa B. Player (page 69). The folder also contains correspondence by Earl Lewis written to Eugene Rodriguez, Jr. (page 27); William H. Burman (page 34); William H. Hansell, Jr. (page 47); and Paula Balik (page 49). The folder also contains a transcription of a speech given by Earl Lewis to the Texas Constitutional Revision Commission on the selection of appellate judges (pages 60-65)
The Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol. 5, No. 1
“A Tempest in a Teapot over Tennis as I Play It,” by Stephen R. Pastore
“Major New Study of the 1920s Novels: Review of The Rise of Sinclair Lewis, 1920-1930, by James M. Hutchisson” rev. by George Killough, College of St. Scholastica
“Joyce Lyng Tends the Sinclair Lewis Memory,” by Jeanne Olson
“Minneapolis Bookseller, Collector Spent Afternoon with Lewis,” by Anne Robinson
“March 8, 1925: Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis,” by Henry Logan Stuarthttps://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1030/thumbnail.jp
Recommended from our members
Lee Govatos with Mary Lewis Kleberg at Weil Dinner Honoring anne Armstrong, Welder Ranch
Lee Govatos with Mary Lewis Kleberg at Weil Dinner Honoring anne Armstrong, Welder Ranc
GAB Adaptive Management Plan
Brake, L, Harris, C, Jensen, A, Keppel, M, Lewis, M & Lewis, S (Project Team, Lynn Brake, Colin Harris, Simon Lewis, Travis Gotch, Megan Lewis, Andy Love, David Leek, Mark Keppel, Anne Jensen
Surrealism’s Curiosity: Lewis Carroll and the Femme-Enfant
This paper concerns surrealist artists' and writers' appropriation of Lewis Carroll. Predominantly focusing on the work of Dorothea Tanning and Max Ernst, it suggests that Carroll's work appealed to the surrealists' fascination with their childhood selves, and their wish to identify with the curious character of Alice as femme-enfant as a way of subverting their bourgeois family backgrounds. Whether stepping Through the Looking Glass or breaking the rules in Wonderland, Alice can be read as a transgressive character apt for surrealist appropriation. The paper traces Carroll's reception in the surrealist movement, and articulates the curious character of the surrealist femme-enfant in order to reinscribe her epistemophilia in line with surrealism's orientation towards research
The Son and the other stars: Christology and cosmology in the imagination of C.S. Lewis
This dissertation treats the theory and practice of C. S. Lewis's theological imagination,
focussing upon the imaginative use he made of his professional expertise in medieval and
renaissance literature. Its approach is principally expository rather than an evaluative.
Chapter One outlines the centrality of the imagination to a proper understanding of Lewis's
works.
Chapter Two examines Lewis's own theory of imagination and surveys how he practised it
as a literary critic. We compare and contrast Lewis's theory and practice of imagination
with that of his friend, the theologian, Austin Faffer.
Chapter Three looks in more detail at Lewis's imaginative practice, in particular his
fascination with the images supplied by the seven planets of the Ptolemaic cosmos, which
he termed 'spiritual symbols of permanent value'. We analyse what he meant by 'sprit'
and 'symbol'.
Chapter Four introduces the main argument of the dissertation namely that these seven
spiritual symbols structure the works for which Lewis is best known, the seven 'Chronicles
of Narnia'. We claim to have uncovered the governing imaginative blueprint of the septet.
We address Lewis's capacity for and interest in secrecy and consider why this planetary
theme has remained hitherto undetected.
In Chapters Five to Eleven we take the seven planets in turn and trace the use Lewis made
of them through out his writings. We analyse the planetary symbolism undergirding each
Chronicle and conclude each chapter with an exegesis of the Christological message of each
book so understood.
Chapter Twelve examines factors which motivated Lewis to focus his imaginative energies
upon Ptolemaic cosmology and suggests one particular occasioning factor behind the
composition of the Chronicles. In addition, we consider theological and pedagogical reasons
why he kept silent about the planetary theme. We conclude by indicating certain
consequences that our argument has for future readings of these seven works
Interview: Anne-Marie Fortier
This paper is an edited version of an email interview conducted by Debra Ferreday and Adi Kuntsman with Anne-Marie Fortier, the author of Multicultural Horizons: Diversity and the Limits of the Civil Nation (Routledge, 2008). Fortier’s work has been informative in the development of some of the arguments explored in this special issue; in their conversation Ferreday and Kuntsman asked her to comment on the ideas of haunting, racial imaginaries, nostalgia, national anxieties, political feelings and hopes for the future
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