18,219 research outputs found

    5.07.009: The Gig : Live by the Scott Goudie - Neil Bishop Band, 1994

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    The case liner for the Scott Goudie and Neil Bishop compact disc The Gig: Live, recorded at the Fat Cat Blues Bar in St. John's, 14-18 September 1994.The compact disc itself, with its label, has not been scanned

    Deposition - Examination of Neil Scott

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    2 pages manuscritesDocument originalExamen volontaire de Neil Scott dans le cadre des rébellions de 1837-183

    Tim Scott: Curlicue I II III

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    'Tim Scott: Curlicue I II III' was an exhibition that brought together remade versions of a trio of sculptures initially produced by the sculptor Tim Scott in 1963. These sculptures were fabricated from archival records and in close consultation with the artist, as part of a research project carried out by Neil Clements. They were exhibited at Ivory Tars, Glasgow in September 2023. This project centred around the re-fabrication of a trio of sculptures that Tim Scott produced in 1963, which make innovative use of malleable foam sheeting. An editioned version of one of these sculptures was acquired by the collector Alistair McAlpine and subsequently gifted to the Tate Gallery in 1970. The remaining pair of works from this group were later destroyed, owing in part to the fragility and limited life-span of the materials employed. This exhibition was the first occasion these works have ever been publicly displayed as a group. Marking sixty years since their creation, this display intended to shed light on an important, yet overlooked moment in post-war British sculpture. In the 1960s Scott became associated with what would become widely known, albeit to the ambivalence of its principal exponents, as ‘New Generation sculpture’. Named after a 1965 exhibition surveying an emerging tendency involving synthetic, brightly-hued surfaces and the abandonment of plinths or pedestals as a mode of display, New Generation sculpture frequently made use of materials that lay beyond a traditional lexicon. Scott’s own works of the period were constructed from amongst other things, glass, acrylic plastic, fibreglass-reinforced resin, welded aluminium and latex foam. The three sculptures were remade by Neil Clements using archival records held by the Tate Gallery, Whitechapel Art Gallery and Scott himself. The project addressed questions concerning the treatment of degradable materials and the relationship between the disciplines of art history, conservation and curation

    Marriage record of Scott, Neil and Boak, Lizzie

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    Marriage license for Neil Scott and Lizzie Boak. W.M. Poage was the officiant

    Citizen participation in news

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    The process of producing news has changed significantly due to the advent of the Web, which has enabled the increasing involvement of citizens in news production. This trend has been given many names, including participatory journalism, produsage, and crowd-sourced journalism, but these terms are ambiguous and have been applied inconsistently, making comparison of news systems difficult. In particular, it is problematic to distinguish the levels of citizen involvement, and therefore the extent to which news production has genuinely been opened up. In this paper we perform an analysis of 32 online news systems, comparing them in terms of how much power they give to citizens at each stage of the news production process. Our analysis reveals a diverse landscape of news systems and shows that they defy simplistic categorisation, but it also provides the means to compare different approaches in a systematic and meaningful way. We combine this with four case studies of individual stories to explore the ways that news stories can move and evolve across this landscape. Our conclusions are that online news systems are complex and interdependent, and that most do not involve citizens to the extent that the terms used to describe them imply

    Group, possibly including Bob Scott and Neil Hall, climbing Monitor Rock using ropes,1942

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    Written on verso: Bob Scott 151 Neil Hall SM. 1942. PH Coll 1408.29

    Belonging and not belonging : understanding India in novels by Paul Scott, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala and V.S. Naipaul.

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    PhDThis thesis is essentially about the "how" and "why" of the Indian experience as documented in novels by Paul Scott, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala and V S Naipaul. The study points to the difficulty of arriving at any conclusive definition of the country and its people. I show that differences in attitudes, responses or behaviour are both overt and subtle, and depend upon whether the writer or the character identifies with the situation or community with which he or she interacts. It is the individual's sense of belonging or not belonging to his or her own group - be this along racial, cultural or gender lines - that accounts for the differing perspectives evident in these novels. The points-of- view of the outsider and the insider can therefore be seen as mutual comments upon the other. Since the struggle between belonging and not belonging becomes acute when the old meets the new, focus is centred on communities experiencing change. These include the British in India, West-Indian Indians and westernised Indians. Despite their differences, all three communities share similar reasons for either an acceptance or rejection of the 'Other'. The thesis argues that the need for emotional stability compels allegiance to the traditional group, while the desire for individuality encourages surrender to the new. The former nurtures a sense of belonging while, it is argued, that the latter is perceived as the hallmark of those who do not belong. Tensions arise when both these needs demand to be met. What I show to be ironic in this struggle between belonging and not belonging is that those things which individuals overtly reject are often unexpressed parts of their personal pysche. The barrier between "them" and "us" is therefore very fragile

    Letter From William Bell Scott to Mr Chambers

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    abstract: Concerning Scott's thanks, his writings about his own works, and a manuscript of "The Nightingale Unheard."Seller's Description: Reads "A.L.S. from Author to Mr. Chambers explaining how busy he is... The sonnet is printed in the book. Fredeman: 56.7 £87.50"Handwritten Note: Unknown handwriting at top right reads "June 1st 1877."Publication Details: "The Nightingale Unheard" published in "Poems" by William Bell Scott.Creation Date Details: Undated range is the author's lifespan.Provenance: Removed from: Poems / by William Bell Scott. Ballads, studies from nature, sonnets, etc. / illustrated by seventeen etchings by the author and L. Alma Tadema. Publisher London : Longmans, Green, 1875. CALL # HAYDEN SPECIAL COLL SPEC PRB-13

    The role of the wheat industry in Idaho's economy

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    Bulletin no. 768 Moscow, Idaho :University of Idaho, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension System, 1994-10-01. Author(s): Robinson, M. Henry; Foltz, John C.; Meyer, Neil L.; Wolf, Scott A.; Smathers, Robert L

    The role of the dairy industry in Idaho's economy

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    Bulletin no. 754 Moscow, Idaho :University of Idaho, College of Agriculture, Agriculture Experiment Station, 1994-02-01. Author(s): Robinson, M. Henry; Foltz, John C.; Meyer, Neil L.; Wolf, Scott A.; Smathers, Robert L
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