11,418 research outputs found
The Author: Kent Davis
Kent Davis is a Montana based author of “A Riddle in Ruby” and the soon to be released sequel, “The Changer’s Key”
Inner/Outer screening
The video work 'BLACKHOLESUN' was programmed as part of Inner/Outer screening from A—Z (Anne Duffau) exploring works that explore & defy preconceived/imperialist hi.Stories of identities & bodies. Through the scope of narratives & distinctive genre ranging from art, youtube mash-up to music videos, the aim is to break boundaries & raise interest in terms of displacement, otherness & post gender.
Featuring works from Vasiliki Antonopoulou, Angela Davis, Juliana Huxtable, Melanie Jackson, Jennifer Martin, Michelle Hannah, Samirah Raheem, Jennifer Juniper Stratford, Jala Wahid, Tierra Whack
Part of Art Licks Weekend 201
Author inscription in The Chinese slave-girl: a story of woman's life in China
This edition includes a gift inscription by author Rev. J.A. Davis, "To Rev. A. G. Russell with the warmest regards of the author J.A. Davis."Davis, John Agnell, 1839-1897
How to Protect Your Music
This year’s Keynote Speaker and UGA Law/SELS Alum, Attorney Michelle Davis, will be offering a copyright primer for musicians titled, “How to Protect Your Music”
H. P. Davis Correspondence
Entries include a handwritten letter from Davis suggesting that the Maine Author Collection could include works by the Davis family and the author Patten and typed letters of correspondence from the Maine State Library
John Davis, Michelle Cleaver-Wilkinson and Michael Harvey, 1991
From left to right: John Davis, Coordinator of the Swinburne Environmental Health courses; Michelle Cleaver Wilkinson and Michael Harvey, staff in the Environmental Health Department. Pictured at the launch of 'Healthy choices : a career in environmental health', a video for secondary students produced by Information Technology Services for the Faculty of Applied Science, 1991. Photograph originally appeared in the 'Swinburne Newsletter', 17 October 1991
Translation and response between Maurice Blanchot and Lydia Davis
When an author translates a text by another writer, this translation is one form of a response to that text. Other responses may appear in their own writings that are more inflected with their authorial persona. Lydia Davis translated six books by Maurice Blanchot, including fiction and theoretical writings. Blanchot’s concept of the récit privileges non-conventional forms of narrative and it can be considered to have influenced Davis, a view shared in critical writing about Davis. However, responses to his fiction can also be found in Davis’s work. This article reads Lydia Davis’s story “Story” as a response to Maurice Blanchot’s récit, La Folie du jour, translated by Davis as “The Madness of the Day”. Both texts develop a narrative that questions the possibility of arriving at a single story: Blanchot’s narrator cannot tell the story of how he came to have glass ground into his eyes, while Davis’s narrator must try to understand a contradictory story told to her by her lover. However, Davis responds to Blanchot by reversing the perspective in the story: where Blanchot’s narrator must and cannot create a story that explains his situation in a judicial/medical context, Davis’s narrator is struggling to understand her lover’s story which does not explain the situation that they find themselves in. Davis’s narrator is therefore motivated by an emotional need to find an acceptable story that is absent from Blanchot’s narrator. This difference in motivation is central to the difference between Davis’s and Blanchot’s approach, and complicates any reading of his influence on her because she responds to his text in her own
THE ROUTLEDGE COMPANION TO INTANGIBLE CULTURAL HERITAGE - Eds. Michelle L. Stefano and Peter Davis
THE ROUTLEDGE COMPANION TO INTANGIBLE CULTURAL HERITAGE (Eds. Michelle L. Stefano and Peter Davis), London: Routledge, 502 pages, ISBN 9781138860551</p
Analysis of Potential Protein Biomarkers in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer Using the Gene Expression Omnibus Database
Michelle Davis and Ruba Deeb's poster examining the use of the Gene Expression Omnibus database to identify genetic protein biomarkers of epithelial ovarian cancer
Illustrator's flat signature in The novels and stories of Richard Harding Davis
This edition includes the flat signature of Illustrator Charles Dana Gibson on the frontispiece in "Gallegher, and other stories"; and a second signature in "Soldiers of Fortune". This is a limited-edition, 256-copy run of "The novels and stories of Richard Harding Davis" [v. 4]. Richard Harding Davis, author, 1864-1916.--v.1. The bar sinister and other stories.--v.2. The exiles and other stories.--v.3. Gallegher and other stories.--v.4. Soldiers of fortune.--v.5. Captain Macklin: his memoirs.--v.6. Ranson's Folly.--v.7. The White mice.-- v.8. The Scarlet car.--v.9. The bar sinister.--v.10. The man who could not lose.--v.11. The red cross girl.--v.12. The lost road.
Davis, Richard Harding, 1864-1916
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