114 research outputs found
Recentering Indigenous Foodways in North America
Food is the foundation for life. Using the past to inform the present, this webinar will explore Indigenous foodways and the politics of food sovereignty across deep time in North America.Featuring exceptional new scholarship from the mixed ancestry Cree researcher, educator and writer Dr Tabitha Robin (Martens) and Professor Joy Porter, Project Lead of the Treatied Spaces Research Cluster at the University of Hull. Join this presentation to explore how food has always determined key aspects of settler/indigenous relationships and why this remains of critical significance today.As part of this talk you are also invited to participate in a live Q&A session with the speakers.Professor Joy Porter is an interdisciplinary researcher and teacher of indigenous history in relation to the environment, war, modernity, literature and cultures.Dr Tabitha Robin (Martens) is a mixed ancestry Cree researcher, educator and writer. She is a PhD student at the University of Manitoba, studying Indigenous Food Sovereignty in the Faculty of Social Work and the Department of Native Studies.Supported by the Leverhulme Trust.Date: 29 June 2021Time: 19:00–20:30Free to access online – Book your plac
Recentering Indigenous Foodways in North America
Food is the foundation for life. Using the past to inform the present, this webinar will explore Indigenous foodways and the politics of food sovereignty across deep time in North America.Featuring exceptional new scholarship from the mixed ancestry Cree researcher, educator and writer Dr Tabitha Robin (Martens) and Professor Joy Porter, Project Lead of the Treatied Spaces Research Cluster at the University of Hull. Join this presentation to explore how food has always determined key aspects of settler/indigenous relationships and why this remains of critical significance today.As part of this talk you are also invited to participate in a live Q&A session with the speakers.Professor Joy Porter is an interdisciplinary researcher and teacher of indigenous history in relation to the environment, war, modernity, literature and cultures.Dr Tabitha Robin (Martens) is a mixed ancestry Cree researcher, educator and writer. She is a PhD student at the University of Manitoba, studying Indigenous Food Sovereignty in the Faculty of Social Work and the Department of Native Studies.Supported by the Leverhulme Trust.Date: 29 June 2021Time: 19:00–20:30Free to access online – Book your plac
Long article on author Tabitha King, who discusses her recent novel One on One.
Long article on author Tabitha King, who discusses her recent novel One on One
News piece on Maine Times senior writer Phyllis Austin, Bangor author Tabitha
News piece on Maine Times senior writer Phyllis Austin, Bangor author Tabitha King and Laura Fortman, executive director of the Maine Women\u27s Lobby, who have all been selected to receive Maryann Hartman Awards for 2001. Honorees are selected by the University of Maine\u27s Women in the Curriculum and Women\u27s Studies program
An article on well-known author Stephen King and his wife, author Tabitha King,
An article on well-known author Stephen King and his wife, author Tabitha King, native Mainers who live in Bangor and focus their low-profile philanthropy locally. Their many beneficiaries include Eastern Maine Medical Center, the Bangor and Old Town libraries, Bangor\u27s new Shawn T. Mansfield Baseball Stadium, area swimming pools, and the University of Maine, where both attended college. They have bought a local radio station to preserve local high-school and college sports coverage. Though wealthy enough to live anywhere, and despite King\u27s fame, they have chosen to raise their family in Bangor and live as regular members of the community. Headquarters for King\u27s fans is Betts Bookstore on Main Street
‘Inherited Images’: the Decolonialist agenda of Katherine Anne Porter and Anita Benner
Katherine Anne Porter and Anita Brenner engaged transcultural journeys in order to realize their visions of validating the work of Indigenous Mexican artists. They both believed that the Indigenismo movement, made popular by the muralists in 1920s post-revolutionary Mexico, celebrated the Natives without negotiating their harsh lived reality. Porter and Brenner employed what may be termed a decolonialist agenda when they chose to work with and showcase Indigenous art in their own creative endeavors. This decolonialist agenda situated the Indigenous voice in the forefront and helped further advance a working-class aesthetic and modern Mexican identity uniquely tied to indigeneity that was often neglected by other revolutionary efforts
Dodson, Tabitha (Death, 1886-03-25)
Address: 99 E. 6th St.Age at death: 65Pg. 169/1886/446/F Col/Ky/Dr. W.E.Lewis/Porter/Union BaptistOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'DIETZ-DOERGER'
Sibling Incest in Tabitha Suzuma’s Forbidden and Kate Avelynn’s Flawed
This study purposely appoints the topic of sibling incest as reacted from the phenomenon of proliferation of illicit relationships that are increasingly being shown blatantly especially in social media. Through literary works such as novel, the phenomenon can be analyzed since those works are the portrayal of real life. ‘Forbidden’ by Tabitha Suzuma and ‘Flawed’ by Kate Avelynn were analyzed with three objectives; 1) describing sibling incest in both novels, 2) finding out the causing factors, 3) describing the impact toward the characters’ life. To achieve those objectives, the concept of incest, theory of psychoanalysis by Karen Horney and theory of comparative literature were applied. While in analyzing the data, it used interpretive perspective with author-oriented approach which concerns with psychoanalytic criticism. The results of this study reveal that the sibling incest in the two novels is different in type although the offenders’ composition is the same, incest between older brother and younger sister. ‘Forbidden’ shows non-abusive incest since it is done on mutual willingness which is motivated by affection, while ‘Flawed’ shows abusive incest since it is done forcefully by the older brother against his sister which is motivated by affection, eroticism, and aggression. The similar factors causing the sibling incest found in both novels are dysfunctional family and between ages peers, while the factor of Law of Homogamy is only found in ‘Forbidden’. Those factors do not cause the sibling incest just like the way without any influences of the characters’ psychological condition which is shaped by their childhood experience and neurotic needs. This study also reveals how sibling incest impacts the characters’ life. They suffer from psychological problems such as anxiety, self disgust, depression, self-destruction, self-blame, low self-esteem, and trauma. The enactment of incest taboo in their state also impacts them to self-isolation and prosecution. Evidently, this study reveals that any kinds of sibling incest with any reasons behind it lead into bad impact and dark phase of the offenders’ life.
Unfinished Business
This ten-minute, five-person play explores the afterlife of four ghosts from all different walks of life and their intersection with a living girl, all in the same apartment. This comedic play exhibits the importance of cooperation, understanding, and empathy, as well as discussing the philosophical ideas of life and death. Unfinished Business stays true to its title by discussing what business people may leave behind, and how important may be to finish it
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