4,401 research outputs found
10 questions for AGMB honorary member Oliver Obst on the occasion of his retirement
On the occasion of his retirement and the award of honorary membership of the AGMB, Dr. Oliver Obst of the medical branch library in Münster answers ten questions about his choice of profession, innovations in librarianship, and the possible future focus of medical libraries.Anlässlich seines Ruhestandes und der Verleihung der Ehrenmitgliedschaft der AGMB beantwortet Dr. Oliver Obst von der Zweigbibliothek Medizin in Münster zehn Fragen zu seiner Berufswahl, Innovationen im Bibliothekswesen und der möglichen zukünftigen Ausrichtung von Medizinbibliotheken
The British ‘Bluesman’ Paul Oliver and the Nature of Transatlantic Blues Scholarship
Recent revisionist studies have argued that much of what is known about music known as the blues’ has been 'invented' by the writing of enthusiasts far removed from the African American culture that created the music. Elijah Wald and Marybeth Hamilton in particular have attempted to sift through the clouds of romanticism, and tried to unveil more empirical histories that were previously obscured by the fallacious genre distinctions conjured up during the 1960s blues revival. While this revisionist scholarship has shed light on some previously ignored historical facts, writers have tended to concentrate on the romanticism of blues writing strictly from an American perspective, failing to acknowledge the genesis and influence of transatlantic scholarship, and therefore ignoring the work of the most prolific and influential blues scholar of the twentieth century, British writer Paul Oliver. By examining the core of Oliver’s research and writing during the 1950s and 1960s, this study aims to place Oliver in his rightful place at the centre of blues historiography. His scholarship allows a more detailed appreciation of the manner in which the blues was studied, through lyrics, recordings, oral histories, photography and African American literature. These historical sources were interpreted in accordance with the author’s attitudes to the commercial popular music, which allowed the ‘reconstruction’ of an African American ‘folk’ culture in which the blues became the antithesis of pop. Importantly, this study seeks to transcend dominant discourses of national cultural ownership or ethnocentrism, and demonstrate that representations of African American music and culture were constructed within a transatlantic context. The blues is music with roots in the African American experience within the United States; however, as Paul Oliver’s writing shows, its reception and representation were not limited by the same national, cultural or racial boundaries
2. Zukunftskolloquium der Zweigbibliothek Medizin der Universität Münster, 28./29. Juni 2010 / Second “Future Colloquium” of the Münster Medical Library, June 28–29, 2010
16 librarians from four countries took part in the “Future Colloquium” of the Münster Medical Library on pressing issues of librarianship, which takes place every sixth year. Expectations and desires were priorized in a moderation round and then systematically discussed. Three topics were anticipated: “Strategy” (presented by Oliver Obst), “Students” (presented by Anna Schlosser) and “Web 2.0” (presented by Guus van den Brekel). A group work on library scenarios shifted the focus on new, innovative services, given that old, traditional services such as purchasing, surpass the library as well as erode former library monopolies. They were experiments with new formulas such as: “Library = Information Specialist for the visit” or “Library = Scientific Publishing Support Agent”. Finally, instructions for practice were proposed
Bibliothek-2.0-Artikel von Jin Tan, Oliver Obst, Patrick Danowski und Lambert Heller sind online
In den Kommentaren zu dem ursprünglichen Hinweis auf Bibliothek. Forschung und Praxis, Jg. 31 (2007) Nr. 2 hatte ich bereits auf unsere verzögert online gegangenen Artikel hingewiesen, aber da so etwas leicht untergeht, hier lieber noch einmal ausführlich: Jin Tan: Virtualisierung - was machen die Bibliotheken? Lambert Heller: Bibliographie und SacherschlieÃ?ung in der Hand vernetzter Informationsbenutzer Oliver Obst: Weblog-Anwendungen in Bibliotheken Patrick Danowski, Lambert Hell..
A Reading By Poet Mary Oliver
Mary Oliver\u27s poetry, with her lyrical connection to the natural world, has firmly established her in the highest realm of American poets. She is renowned for her evocative and precise imagery, which brings nature into clear focus, transforming the everyday world into a place of magic and discovery. As poet Stanley Kunitz has said, Mary Oliver\u27s poetry is fine and deep; it reads like a blessing. Her special gift is to connect us with our sources in the natural world, its beauties and terrors and mysteries and consolations. Please join Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Mary Oliver as she shares her joyous, accessible, and intimate observations of the natural world.
Mary Oliver is the celebrated author of more than a dozen books of poetry and prose. With her lyrical connection to the natural world, Oliver\u27s poetry has firmly established her in the highest realm of American poets. Oliver has been honored with the National Book Award for Poetry, the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, and a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, among others
"Hi, fellas. come on in." Norman Carlson, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, and the Rise of Prison Fellowship
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in the Journal of Church and State following peer review. The version of record - Kendrick Oliver; “Hi, Fellas. Come on in.” Norman Carlson, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, and the Rise of Prison Fellowship, Journal of Church and State, Volume 55, Issue 4, 1 December 2013, Pages 740–757 - is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1093/jcs/css05
Second "Future Colloquium" of the Münster Medical Library, June 28-29, 2010
16 librarians from four countries took part in the "Future Colloquium" of the Münster Medical Library on pressing issues of librarianship, which takes place every sixth year. Expectations and desires were priorized in a moderation round and then systematically discussed. Three topics were anticipated: "Strategy" (presented by Oliver Obst), "Students" (presented by Anna Schlosser) and "Web 2.0" (presented by Guus van den Brekel). A group work on library scenarios shifted the focus on new, innovative services, given that old, traditional services such as purchasing, surpass the library as well as erode former library monopolies. They were experiments with new formulas such as: "Library = Information Specialist for the visit" or "Library = Scientific Publishing Support Agent". Finally, instructions for practice were proposed.16 Bibliothekarinnen und Bibliothekare aus vier Ländern nahmen am alle sechs Jahre stattfindende Zukunftskolloquium der Münsteraner Medizinbibliothek zu drängenden Fragen des Bibliothekswesens teil. Erwartungen und Wünsche wurden in einer Moderationsrunde priorisiert und dann systematisch diskutiert. Drei antizipierte Themen waren vorbereitet worden: "Strategie" (präsentiert von Herrn Obst), "Studierende" (präsentiert von Frau Schlosser) und "Web 2.0" (präsentiert von Guus van den Brekel). Am zweiten Tag wurde durch Gruppenarbeiten zu einer typischen Studenten- bzw. Wissenschaftlerbibliothek der Fokus auf neue, in-novative Dienstleistungen gerichtet, da alte, traditionelle Dienstleistungen wie Erwerbung vielerorts erfolgreich an der Bibliothek vorbeilaufen und Bibliotheksmonopole ins Wanken geraten. Es wurde mit neuen Formeln experimentiert wie: "Bibliothek = Informationsspezialist für die Visite" oder "Bibliothek = Scientific Publishing Support Agent". Schlussendlich wurden konkrete und individuelle Handlungsanweisungen für die Praxis erstellt
Biography of Mary Jane Oliver
Typescript of a sketch biography about Mary Jane (Oliver) Barlow, who came came from England around 1851 and with her husband, Oswald Barlow, helped to settle Saint George. Author unknown, but copied on January 13, 1937 by Virginia M. Lee of the Federal Writers Project, WPA, at Ogden, Uta
A conversation between Sandy Oliver of Isleboro, cookery author and columnist, a
A conversation between Sandy Oliver of Isleboro, cookery author and columnist, and Melissa Kelly, author, chef, and founder of Primo restaurants in Rockland, Tucson, and Orlando. Oliver is updating Marjorie Mosser\u27s Good Maine Food, and Kelly is updating Marjorie Standish\u27s Cooking Down East . They share their thoughts on traditional Maine food, vegetable gardening, using local and seasonal food, and raising livestock for food
Rehearsing the Mirror: The Gaze as Thought in “Capadocia”, by Mariana Oliver
El ensayo “Capadocia”, de Mariana Oliver, propone una reflexión sobre la mirada como forma de pensamiento. A partir de una poética de la observación, Oliver convierte la imagen en un dispositivo de conocimiento que vincula percepción y lenguaje. Este artículo examina cómo, en Aves migratorias, la autora desarrolla una escritura híbrida que conjuga elementos narrativos, cronísticos y reflexivos para explorar la tensión entre superficie y profundidad, tanto en el plano espacial como en el epistemológico. La mirada, entendida no solo como acto físico sino como proceso intelectual, permite a Oliver contrastar la visión del pasado con la del presente y articular una crítica a la superficialidad de la mirada contemporánea, representada por el turismo performativo y la fotografía como simulacro. En este marco, “Capadocia” se configura como un ensayo que piensa desde lo visible, donde la observación se convierte en un modo de conocimiento y en una ética del mirar.
Mariana Oliver’s essay “Capadocia” offers a reflection on vision as a form of thought. Through a poetics of observation, Oliver transforms the image into a cognitive device that links perception and language. This article analyzes how, in Aves migratorias, the author develops a hybrid form of writing that combines narrative, chronicle, and reflective elements to explore the tension between surface and depth, both spatially and epistemologically. Vision, understood not only as a physical act but also as an intellectual process, enables Oliver to contrast past and present ways of seeing, articulating a critique of contemporary superficiality embodied in performative tourism and photography as simulacrum. Within this framework, “Capadocia” emerges as an essay that thinks through the visible, where observation becomes both a mode of knowledge and an ethics of seeing
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