844 research outputs found

    sj-pdf-2-cre-10.1177_02692155231172009 - Supplemental material for Are People with Aphasia Included in Stroke Trials? A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-cre-10.1177_02692155231172009 for Are People with Aphasia Included in Stroke Trials? A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis by Eileen Vaughan and Molly X Manning in Clinical Rehabilitation</p

    sj-pdf-1-cre-10.1177_02692155231172009 - Supplemental material for Are People with Aphasia Included in Stroke Trials? A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-cre-10.1177_02692155231172009 for Are People with Aphasia Included in Stroke Trials? A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis by Eileen Vaughan and Molly X Manning in Clinical Rehabilitation</p

    Molly Ivins: Insights from Molly

    No full text
    Mary Tyler Molly Ivins (August 30, 1944 – January 31, 2007) was an American newspaper columnist, author, political commentator, and humorist. Born in California and raised in Texas, Ivins attended Smith College and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. She began her journalism career at the Minneapolis Tribune where she became the first female police reporter at the paper. Ivins joined The Texas Observer in the early 1970s and later moved to The New York Times. She became a columnist for the Dallas Times Herald in the 1980s, and then the Fort Worth Star-Telegram after the Times Herald was sold and shuttered. The column was subsequently syndicated by Creators Syndicate and carried by hundreds of newspapers

    Molly Haskell: 03-10-1977

    No full text
    Molly Haskell, film critic for the Village Voice and author of From Reverence to Rape discusses the ways women are portrayed in both film and television. Haskell describes how culture and male influence shape that portrayal and her hopes for the future of women on screen.https://digitalcommons.brockport.edu/writers_videos/1057/thumbnail.jp

    Molly McCully Brown, 44th Annual ODU Literary Festival

    No full text
    Molly McCully Brown is the author of the essay collection, Places I’ve Taken My Body, which was named one of Kirkus Reviews’ best nonfiction titles of 2020, and the poetry collection, The Virginia State Colony for Epileptics and Feebleminded, which won the 2016 Lexi Rudnitsky First Book Prize. With Susannah Nevision, she wrote the poetry collection In the Field Between Us. The recipient of a United States Artists Fellowship, the Amy Lowell Poetry Traveling Scholarship, and the Civitella Ranieri Foundation and Jeff Baskin Writers fellowships, Brown is an assistant professor of English and creative nonfiction at Old Dominion University

    Molly Haskell: 03-10-1977

    No full text
    Molly Haskell, feminist film critic for the Village Voice and author of "From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies," discusses the ways women are portrayed in both film and television. Haskell describes how culture and male influence shape that portrayal and her hopes for the future of women on screen. She begins the interview by reading a section of her book. She goes on to discuss television becoming dominant over movies, and talks about the transition of film into art. She then talks about the woman’s role in movies, discuses American films versus European films, and touches on women directors in the film industry. She ends the interview by discussing the credentials of a film critic.Archived web contentSUNY BrockportWriters Forum Video

    The Designer As... Author, Producer, Activist, Entrepreneur, Curator, and Collaborator: New Models for Communicating

    No full text
    Review of The Designer As.. Author, Producer, Activist, Entrepreneur, Curator, and Collaborator: New Models for Communicating, Reveiwed March 2014 by Molly E. Dotson, Special Collections Librarian, Robert B. Haas Family Arts Library, Yale University

    Molly Stevens

    No full text
    Molly Stevens is the award-winning author of the newly published Boomer on the Ledge, described as an adult picture book that explores the antics of an aging boomer

    Molly Rufus

    No full text
    Image submitted by author for Poetry Spotlighthttps://digitalcommons.odu.edu/vapoets-images/1033/thumbnail.jp

    The Myth of Ephraim Tutt

    No full text
    The Myth of Ephraim Tutt explores the true and previously untold story behind one of the most elaborate literary hoaxes in American history. Arthur Train was a Harvard-educated and well-respected attorney. He was also a best-selling author. Train’s greatest literary creation was the character Ephraim Tutt, a public-spirited attorney and champion of justice.Guided by compassion and a strong moral compass, Ephraim Tutt commanded a loyal following among general readers and lawyers alike—in fact, Tutt’s fictitious cases were so well-known that attorneys, judges, and law faculty cited them in courtrooms and legal texts. People read Tutt’s legal adventures for more than twenty years, all the while believing their beloved protagonist was merely a character and that Train’s stories were works of fiction. But in 1943 a most unusual event occurred: Ephraim Tutt published his own autobiography. The possibility of Tutt’s existence as an actual human being became a source of confusion, spurring heated debates. One outraged reader sued for fraud, and the legendary lawyer John W. Davis rallied to Train’s defense. While the public questioned whether the autobiography was a hoax or genuine, many book reviewers and editors presented the book as a work of nonfiction. In The Myth of Ephraim Tutt Molly Guptill Manning explores the controversy and the impact of the Ephraim Tutt autobiography on American culture. She also considers Tutt’s ruse in light of other noted incidents of literary hoaxes, such as those ensuing from the publication of works by Clifford Irving, James Frey, and David Rorvik, among others. As with other outstanding fictitious characters in the literary canon, Ephraim Tutt took on a life of his own. Out of affection for his favorite creation, Arthur Train spent the final years of his life crafting an autobiography that would ensure Tutt’s lasting influence—and he was spectacularly successful in this endeavor. Tutt, as the many letters written to him attest, gave comfort to his readers as they faced the challenging years of the Great Depression and World War II and renewed their faith in humanity and justice. Although Tutt’s autobiography bewildered some of his readers, the great majority were glad to have read the “life” story of this cherished character.https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/fac_books/1102/thumbnail.jp
    corecore