11,651 research outputs found

    Kate Richards: madness

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    Kate Richards’ bleakly beautiful, confronting and important book, Madness: A Memoir, describes her 15 years coping with psychosis and depression, and her long, hard-won journey back to sanity, with the help of a wise and compassionate psychologist. In this video, she speaks with Ranjana Srivastava, an oncologist and fellow author, about her experience – and about being able to write from deep within it, with expertise as both a medical researcher and writer. &nbsp

    Cultural Manifesto/ Indianapolis Musician Kate Boyd

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    Kyle Long speaks with Indianapolis musician Kate Boyd about her recording of John Cage\u27s work for prepared piano. Link leads to the full broadcast but Kate\u27s interview starts at 4:17/1:00:00

    Entertaining ideas (The long view), by Kate Briggs

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    Imagine that we too (imagine that I too), wanted to welcome ideas, to attend to them, to take care of them, to make sure they have a good time. Imagine that I too wanted to be a good hostess to writing ideas. How to be open to them, how to be alert to them—so that I know how and when to let them in? ENTERTAINING IDEAS began as a reading exercise: an effort to perform a ‘good reading’ of Elizabeth Jane Howard’s The Long View(1956), and to think about what a ‘good’ short reading of a long novel might mean, what it might look like or read like. As a translator, Kate Briggs accepts that writing out a reading involves change, tampering with what seems perfect, and doing so from necessity, as a way of learning how exactly it works. She has changed Howard’s book. Her exercise changed too, expanding unexpectedly into a set of reflections on writing backwards, living forwards, and entertaining ideas. ‘Kate Briggs generously shares with us her unique and delicately revolutionary way of reading; the moment where writing becomes the only way to grasp our slippery thoughts and desires. This book is pure joy.’ –≥ Alejandro Zambra Kate Briggs is a writer and translator based in Rotterdam, NL. She is the translator of two volumes of lecture and seminar notes by Roland Barthes (Columbia University Press, 2011 and 2013). Other publications include:Exercise in Pathetic Criticism (Information as Material, 2011), On Reading as an Alternation of Flights and Perchings (NO Press, 2013), and The Nabokov Paper (Information as Material, 2013). This Little Art, a long essay on the practice of translation, was published by Fitzcarraldo Editions in 2017

    Guidelines for Data Annotation

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    Included here are a coding manual and supplementary examples of gesture forms (in still images and video recordings) that informed the coding of the first author (Kate Mesh) and four project reliability coders

    Kate Christensen, 37th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    KATE CHRISTENSEN is the author of six novels, including The Epicure\u27s Lament, the PEN/Faulkner award-winning The Great Man, and The Astral. She describes herself as a cook of the improvisational, what\u27s-in-the-cupboard school, which is also, possibly not coincidentally, [her] strategy with writing, and as someone who was raised in Berkeley in the 1960s, long before the Bay Area became the American locavore/foodie mecca. She now lives in Portland, Maine, and the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Her food memoir is Blue Plate Special: An Autobiography of My Appetites (Doubleday, 2013). She is currently collaborating with Barbara Lynch, the Boston chef, on her memoir

    Declining Unionization, Rising Inequality: an Interview with Kate Bronfenbrenner

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    Kate Bronfenbrenner is director of labor education research at the New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University. She worked for many years as an organizer with the United Woodcutters Association in Mississippi and the Service Employees International Union in Boston. She is the author, co-author and editor of numerous books and articles on union strategies

    Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer

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    Photograph of Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palme

    SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer signing book

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    Photograph of SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer signing boo

    Kate Greenaway's Alphabet (V)

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    Relief prints--wood engravings;Illustrated with color printed wood engravings. A miniature alphabet book with glazed pictorial boards. Each page contains an upper and lower case letter. Charming children crawling through and around each letter illustrate the book. This page depicts a young girl playing badminton around the letter "V."The daughter of an English wood engraver, Kate Greenaway was educated at home by tutors before going off to art school. Her mother had a children's clothing shop for which Kate designed and sewed dainty, long muslin gowns in a style that was similar to clothing from a century before. It was these designs that she made famous in her several books, postcards, and greeting cards and which are so quickly identifiable today (Pamela Harer, A Century of Alphabets). This is one of Greenaway's most common and popular books. George Routledge & Sons were located at 7 Broadway, Ludgate Hill from 1865-1889.Alphabet books

    Kate Greenaway's Alphabet (cover)

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    Relief prints--wood engravings;Illustrated with color printed wood engravings. A miniature alphabet book in publisher's glazed yellow pictorial wrappers; light pastel green inside covers. Each page contains an upper and lower case letter. Charming children crawling through and around each letter illustrate the book. The cover depicts a woman and child reading together.The daughter of an English wood engraver, Kate Greenaway was educated at home by tutors before going off to art school. Her mother had a children's clothing shop for which Kate designed and sewed dainty, long muslin gowns in a style that was similar to clothing from a century before. It was these designs that she made famous in her several books, postcards, and greeting cards and which are so quickly identifiable today (Pamela Harer, A Century of Alphabets). This is one of Greenaway's most common and popular books. George Routledge & Sons were located at 7 Broadway, Ludgate Hill from 1865-1889.Alphabet books
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