128,314 research outputs found
Charles Neale, S.J. (2 of 4)
Contains ALS: from Abp Carroll to F. Neale on establishment of perpetual free place at Georgetown, first offered to Charles Pisi 6/7/1810; from Abp Carroll on request to retain E. Fenwick as pastor of St. Mary's, Alexandria 7/5/1810; from Abp Carroll to E. Fenwick on loan from Holy Trinity Church for burial of Anne Barry 8/7/1810; from Francis Maleve, SJ to F. Neale on availability of land owned by Samuel Lilly in Frederick 8/17/1810; from Joseph Smith to F. Neale advising purchase of Lilly land 8/30/1810; from Abp Carroll to C. Neale on relations of Society to See and Georgetown's reduced number of students 9/11/1810; from Adam Marshall, SJ to F. Neale on debt of St. Thomas Manor, overseer from White Marsh for Port Tobacco 9/16/1810; from Camillo Luigi de Rossi to Grassi 10/4/1810; from B. Fenwick to G. Fenwick, Sr. on former's appointment as head of NY Literary Institute, attempt to obtain license for lottery to support school 12/4/1810; from Plowden to Grassi on Napoleon, donation of land to Stonyhurst (undated).**Former finding aid locations: 119_57.1_09; 203M1-203M10*
Charles Neale, S.J. (7 of 7)
Contains ALS: from A. Kohlmann to McElroy on Abp's wish for secular assistant for Frederick Jan 1823; from Dzierozynski to C. Neale on misc. instructions from Fr. General Jan 1823; from John Walsh to E. Fenwick on claims against Baltimore Cathedral 1/3/1823; from B. Fenwick to G. Fenwick on faculty at Georgetown, Washington Seminary, Abp Marechal's attempts to claim White Marsh, schism in Philadelphia, debts of Society in Maryland 1/14/1823; from Bp Conwell to Marshall on disposition of St. Mary's, Philadelphia, Society property in general 1/16/1823; from Abp Marechal to McElroy on Lent regulations, deed to unspecified church property 1/26/1823, grant of faculties 3/19/1823, on ordination of Jesuits, Liberty church dedication 6/20/1823; from Beschter to C. Neale on disputes with Abp Marechal 2/17/1823, on regulations regarding Church property and trustees 2/17/1823; from N. Sewall to E. Fenwick on Marechal's demands for White Marsh 2/27/1823; from Abp Marechal to A. Kohlmann on ordinations 3/7/1823, on Maryland mission to Louisiana 3/15/1823; from Virgil Barber, SJ to Dzierozynski requesting Society presence in New England 3/17/1823; from Dzierozynski to McElroy on misc. 3/27/1823; from Beschter to F. Neale on departure of missioners for Missouri, Marechal's interference at White Marsh 4/20/1823; from Rantzau to John Murphy, SJ on misc. 4/20/1823; from F. Neale to E. Fenwick on Trustee meeting at St. Thomas, death of C. Neale 5/12/1823; from Joseph Tristram, SJ to A. Kohlmann on disposition of Society property 5/18/1823; from Grassi to McElroy on news of Italian colleges, promise to send painting Return of Prodigal Son 6/1/1823; from J. Simpson, Editor of Washington Republican, to E. Fenwick on complimentary copies 6/14/1823; to B. Fenwick on projected painting of L. Neale 6/18/1823; to G. Fenwick on declining state of Georgetown, flourishing state of seminary 6/22/1823; to E. Fenwick on misc. finances 5/5/1823.**Former finding aid locations: 119_60_12; 206S0-206 S16*
Body, time, and the others: African-American anthropology and the rewriting of ethnographic conventions in the ethnographies by Zora Neale Hurston and Katherine Dunham
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.This research looks at the ethnographies Mules and Men (1935) and Tell My Horse: Voodoo and Life in Haiti and Jamaica (1938) by Zora Neale Hurston focusing on representations of Time and the anthropologist’s body. Hurston was an African-American anthropologist, folklorist, and novelist who conducted research particularly between the end of the 1920s and the mid-1930s. At first, her fieldwork and writings dealt with African-American communities in Florida and Hoodoo practice in Louisiana, but she consequently expanded her field of anthropological interests to Jamaica and Haiti, which she visited between 1936 and 1937. The temporal and bodily factors in Hurston’s works are taken into consideration as coordinates of differentiation between the ethnographer and the objects of her research. In her ethnographies, the representation of the anthropologist’s body is analysed as an attempt at reducing temporal distance in ethnographical writings paralleled by the performative experience of fieldwork exemplified by Hurston’s storytelling: body, voice, and the dialogic representation of fieldwork relationships do not guarantee a portrayal of the anthropological subject on more egalitarian terms, but cast light on the influence of the anthropologist both in the practice and writing of ethnography. These elements are analysed in reference to the visualistic tradition of American anthropology as ways of organising difference and ascribing the anthropological ‘Others’ to a temporal frame characterised by bodily and cultural features perceived as ‘primitive’ and, therefore, distant from modernity. Representations and definitions of ‘primitiveness’ and ‘modernity’ not only shaped both twentieth-century American anthropology and the modernist arts (Harlem Renaissance), but also were pivotal for the creation of a modern African-American identity in its relation to African history and other black people involved in the African diaspora. In the same years in which Hurston visited Jamaica and Haiti, another African-American woman anthropologist and dancer, Katherine Dunham, conducted fieldwork in the Caribbean and started to look at it as a source of inspiration for the emerging African-American dance as recorded in her ethnographical and autobiographical account Island Possessed (1969). Therefore, Hurston’s and Dunham’s representations of Haiti are examined as points of intersection for the different discourses which both widened and complicated their understanding of what being ‘African’ and ‘American’ could mean.Isambard Research Scholarship from Brunel University and grant from Allan & Nesta Ferguson Charitable Trust
Anna Neale and Mary Beard visit Pompeii
The Museum of Classical Archaeology is usually in the business of making the Greek and Roman world visible. But on Friday April 26th the Museum is going to be striking out into the world of contemporary music in order to make the ancient world audible.
In an hour’s double act with Professor Mary Beard, Anna Neale is going to be singing numbers from her recent album ‘River Man’.
Copryight 2011 John Milton www.thattake.com (48 B)‘River Man’ is a collection of songs influenced by the life, times, loves and legacy of Pompeii. It chronicles universal themes of love and knowledge, as relevant today as they ever were, and takes the listener on an epic musical odyssey through Roman history. Anna’s aim is to make these themes reverberate around the gallery’s galaxy of images bringing back to life these resonant presences from the classical past
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
Charles Neale, S.J. (4 of 7)
Contains ALS: from Fortis to Philip Sacchi, SJ on latter's examination 5/4/1822; from C. Neale to Marshall on debt of White Marsh, economies needed there, election of trustees 5/4/1822, on assignment 5/7/1822, on debts, need to halt book purchases for Washington Seminary 5/18/1822, debts of Washington Seminary, White Marsh 6/4/1822, ordination of V. Barber 6/11/1822; from Dzierozynski to Cary on Grassi's fortunes in Italy, Jesuits in Russia 5/21/1822; from Bp John England of Charleston to B. Fenwick 5/23/1822; from John Walsh to E. Fenwick on misc. 5/28/1822; from Kenney to McElroy on increase of Italian Colleges, assignment of European Jesuits to America 6/28/1822; from Joseph Snyder to Marshall on misc. 6/29/1822.*Other finding aid locations: 119_60_15; 206W1-206 W10
Recommended from our members
[AIDS Memorial Quilt Panel for Michael B. Neale]
Photograph of the AIDS memorial quilt panel for Michael B. Neale. Block number is 0489. Photograph of quilt has been cropped and mounted to a 4" x 6" index card
Dispelling the Myths Behind First-author Citation Counts
We conducted a full-scale evaluative citation analysis study of scholars in the XML research field to explore just how different from each other author rankings resulting from different citation counting methods actually are, and to demonstrate the capability of emerging data and tools on the Web in supporting more realistic citation counting methods. Our results contest some common arguments for the continued
use of first-author citation counts in the evaluation of scholars, such as high correlations between author rankings by first-author citation counts and other citation
counting methods, and high costs of using more realistic citation counting methods that are not well-supported by the ISI databases. It is argued that increasingly available digital full text research papers make it possible for citation analysis studies to go beyond what the ISI databases have directly supported and to employ more
sophisticated methods
Neale, Kay: transcript of a video interview (18-May-2016)
Interview with Ms Kay Neale, conducted by Professor Tilli Tansey, for the History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group, 18 May 2016, in the School of History, Queen Mary University of London. Transcribed by Mrs Debra Gee, and edited by Professor Tilli Tansey and Ms Caroline Overy. The project management and the technical support (filming and production) were undertaken by Mr Adam Wilkinson and Mr Alan Yabsley, respectively. Ms Kay Neale MSc SRN (b. 1946) qualified as a nurse at the Royal Free Hospital in 1967 and was appointed as a District Nurse in Islington in 1969. In 1974 she started to work at St Mark’s Hospital as a Research Nurse funded by the Cancer Research Campaign. She worked with Dr Michael Hill, who was studying gut chemistry and flora at the Centre for Applied Microbiological Research at Porton Down, and patients with polyposis were part of the group included in their research. In 1984 she was appointed to work alongside Dr H J R Bussey and Dr Sheila Ritchie in the Polyposis Registry, funded by the Imperial Cancer Research Fund. She gained a Master’s degree in 1985 in survey research methods and helped with the computerization of data, collected since St Mark’s Polyposis Registry began in 1924. This unique database has provided support for both clinical and laboratory based research, including the localization of the APC and MYH genes. She is currently employed by London North West Healthcare NHS Trust. She was a founder member of the Leeds Castle Polyposis Group (1985), which evolved into the International Society for Gastrointestinal Hereditary Tumours (2005), of which she remains the Honorary Administrative Secretary.The History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group is funded by the Wellcome Trust, which is a registered charity (no. 210183). The current interview has been funded by the Wellcome Trust Strategic Award entitled “Makers of modern biomedicine: testimonies and legacy” (2012-2017; awarded to Professor Tilli Tansey)
Neale, Kay: transcript of an audio interview (18-May-2016)
Interview of Ms Kay Neale, conducted by Professor Tilli Tansey, for the History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group, 18 May 2016, in the School of History, Queen Mary University of London. Transcribed by Mrs Debra Gee, and edited by Professor Tilli Tansey and Ms Caroline Overy. The project management and the technical support were undertaken by Mr Adam Wilkinson and Mr Alan Yabsley, respectively. Ms Kay Neale MSc SRN (b. 1946) qualified as a nurse at the Royal Free Hospital in 1967 and was appointed as a District Nurse in Islington in 1969. In 1974 she started to work at St Mark’s Hospital as a Research Nurse funded by the Cancer Research Campaign. She worked with Dr Michael Hill, who was studying gut chemistry and flora, initially based in Colindale but moved to the Centre for Applied Microbiological Research at Porton Down, and patients with polyposis were part of the group included in their research. In 1984 she was appointed to work alongside Dr H J R Bussey and Dr Sheila Ritchie in the Polyposis Registry, funded by the Imperial Cancer Research Fund. She gained a Master’s degree in 1985 in survey research methods and helped with the computerisation of data, collected since St Mark’s Polyposis Registry began in 1924. This unique database has provided support for both clinical and laboratory based research, including the localisation of the APC and MYH genes. She is currently employed by London North West Healthcare NHS Trust as the Manager of the Department of Inherited Intestinal Cancer Syndromes. She was a founder member of the Leeds Castle Polyposis Group (1985), which evolved into the International Society for Gastrointestinal Hereditary Tumours (2005), of which she remains the Honorary Administrative Secretary.The History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group is funded by the Wellcome Trust, which is a registered charity (no. 210183). The current interview has been funded by the Wellcome Trust Strategic Award entitled “Makers of modern biomedicine: testimonies and legacy” (2012-2017; awarded to Professor Tilli Tansey)
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