362 research outputs found

    Black and Puerto Rican Art Movements, Yasmin Ramirez, the Black Bag Speakers, PSU, 2006

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    Dr. Yasmin Ramirez’ lecture entitled: “The iconography of Black and Puerto Rican Art Movements, 1960s-1980s: a comparative study of arts activism and social change in New York City during the post civil rights era.” Introduction by Ethan Johnson, Associate Professor. Vocal performer K. Peterson at 02:07. Ramirez begins 07:30. Brief interruption between 1:00:06-1:00:27. Program ends abruptly during talk. Sponsored by the Black Studies Department and the Multicultural Center, Portland State University.https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/black_bag_series/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Foreign bodies: a conversation between Yasmin Gunaratnam and Ali Eisa

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    This text is the result of several online conversations and an a-synchronous shared file. A process taking nearly two years. The incremental pace and long stretches of silence were invariably shaped by our struggles with workload, while joining industrial actions taken by the UK’s University and College Union over equitable pay, working conditions and pensions. Despite the runaway marketisation of university life, our exchanges were something of a shelter, holding those lovely moments that mark scholarly camaraderie – energising, provocative, dimly lit. As we are both interested in drawing political commitments into formats, we have opted for a conversation rather an interview, which feels like a more democratising form. Yasmin Gunaratnam is a sociologist and yoga teacher. She is author of Researching Race and Ethnicity: Methods, Knowledge and Power and Death and the Migrant: Bodies, Borders, Care (Gunaratnam, 2013) and co-author of Go Home? The Politics of Immigration Controversies (Jones et al., 2017). She has edited numerous collections and journal issues. Yasmin is Chair in Social Justice at the School of Education, Community and Society, King’s College, London. Ali Eisa is an artist and educator based in London. He is a Learning and Participation Manager at Autograph1 a visual arts charity supporting photography and film exploring identity, representation, rights and social justice. Ali is a lecturer in Fine Art at Goldsmiths and has a long-term collaborative artistic practice called Lloyd Corporation2, working with sculpture, installation, performance and participation, often taking inspiration from informal and local economies

    Molecular characterization of novel soybean-associated viruses identified by high-throughput sequencing

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    High-throughput sequencing of mRNA from soybean leaf samples collected from North Dakota and Illinois soybean fields revealed the presence of two novel soybean-associated viruses. The first virus has a single-stranded positive-sense RNA genome consisting of 8,693 nt that contains two large open reading frames (ORFs). The predicted amino acid sequence of the first ORF showed similarity to structural proteins, of members of the invertebrate-infecting Dicistroviridae and the sequence of the second ORF which is a nonstructural proteins lack affinity to other virus sequences available in GenBank. The presence of separate ORFs for the structural and nonstructural proteins was similar to members of the family Dicistroviridae, but the order of the two ORFs in the new virus was opposite to that of the family Dicistroviridae. Because of the virus' unique genome organization and the lack of strong phylogenetic association with previously described virus families, the soybean-associated virus may represent a novel virus family. The second virus also has a single stranded positive sense RNA genome, but has two genomic segments. The larger segment (RNA1), which is 8,208 nt long, encodes the replication-related proteins while the smaller segment (RNA2), which is 5,806 nt long, encodes the structural and movement proteins. Both the segments have a very long 3' untranslated regions with lengths of more than 1,550 nt. The predicted amino acid sequences for both the segments were closely related to members of subgroup C of the genus Nepovirus.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'Closed Access', the embargo will last until 2018-05-01The student, Tuba Yasmin, accepted the attached license on 2016-04-13 at 22:10.The student, Tuba Yasmin, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2016-04-13 at 22:26.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2016-04-21 at 16:03.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #9217 on 2016-07-07 at 14:16:42Made available in DSpace on 2016-07-07T21:14:42Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 YASMIN-THESIS-2016.pdf: 1092733 bytes, checksum: d4dd96277fe41fe9d14e86eab4226bfe (MD5) LICENSE.txt: 4208 bytes, checksum: a7c6333ea88aae304c7e200c383f37db (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016-04-21Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 93251 Lift date: 2018-07-07T21:14:52Z Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemEmbargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 93251 Lift date: 2018-07-07T21:18:16Z Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemLimited Restriction Lifted for Item 93251 on 2018-07-08T09:15:36Z

    Girl power and the pill: Unpacking web-based marketing for Alesse and Yasmin

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    The chapter, "Girl power and the pill: Unpacking web-based marketing for Alesse and Yasmin" was written by Alison M. Thomas (Douglas College Faculty). Interrogating and integrating the various aspects of women's reproductive lives to expose the political dimensions of reproduction. Ideas of choice and rights traditionally dominate discussions concerning reproduction and gender politics. Fertile Ground argues that the current political climate in Canada necessitates a broader understanding of the links between the politics of reproduction, the state, and gender relations. Three major themes are developed in the book: women's lived experiences, the role of the state in reproductive politics, and discourses around reproduction. Contributors examine unequal access to in vitro fertilization treatments depending upon class, race, age, disability, and health status; critique Health Canada's adherence to a medical model of breastfeeding; analyze marketing campaigns for birth-control products; and recount the Aamjiwnaang First Nation's experience of seeking recognition for reproductive health concerns. Fertile Ground links reproduction to marginalization, contestation, and the state in order to illuminate the continuity of reproductive moments and their implications for identity, activism, policy formation, and further scholarship. A timely and multidisciplinary account of reproduction and gender politics in Canada, Fertile Ground will interest academics, activists, and professionals involved in the areas of women’s studies, politics, sociology, and public health. -- From publisher description.book chapterPublished

    IMR 665: Management of Audio Visual Records & Archives. Individual assignment: Article summary / Yasmin Shukri

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    Article on: Article 1 - “Thematic description of audio-visual information on television” Article 2 - “The production and distribution of audiovisual works via new media in the light of European media policy: constraints and opportunities” There are two articles that being chosen and being reviewed for the article summary. The first article is title as “Thematic description of audio-visual information on television” whereby the author of this article is Jorge Caldera-Serrano. Besides, this article is being produced and released on 2010 and the overall article has 8 pages. Meanwhile, the second article that being used is ‘The production and distribution of audiovisual works via new media in the light of European media policy: constraints and opportunities. There are two authors for this second article which is Evi Werkers and also Peggy Valcke. This article had been produced on 2012 and has 18 pages. On the other hand, these two articles are research paper and had be found and view in Emerald Insight online database

    Anna Bondestam som arbetarförfattare. En marknadsförings- och receptionsanalys

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    Yasmin Nyqvist, Department of Comparative Literature, Åbo Akademi University Anna Bondestam as a Working-Class Writer. A Marketing and Reception Analysis (Anna Bondestam som arbetarförfattare. En marknadsförings- och receptionsanalys) In the contemporary history of literature, the Finland-Swedish author, historian, and social democratic activist Anna Bondestam (1907–1995) is considered one of the few and foremost depicters of the Finland-Swedish working class. Even though this position might have seemed undisputable at the end of Bondestam’s career, with her having written several novels from a working-class perspective and five historic books about the Finland-Swedish working-class movement, this article addresses and analyzes the quite different official images of the author in the Finland-Swedish, Finnish-speaking and Swedish public spheres in the first half of her career in the 1940s and 50s. Through a study of publishing house marketing for her novel Lågt i tak (1944) along with analyses of the critical reception of three of her novels set in a working-class environment — Lågt i tak, Klyftan (1947) and Vägen till staden (1957) — the article shows the ways in which Bondestam, when it comes to the working-class perspective and the political message of her work, was marketed and perceived quite differently at the time, depending on cultural and national contexts. On the one hand, the article sheds light on how Bondestam was constructed as a working-class author over time and, on the other, shows the different ways the topic was handled by the cultural establishments in Sweden and among the Finnish-speaking and Swedish-speaking Finns respectively

    Anna Bondestam som arbetarförfattare. En marknadsförings- och receptionsanalys [Elektronisk resurs]

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    Yasmin Nyqvist, Department of Comparative Literature, Åbo Akademi UniversityAnna Bondestam as a Working-Class Writer. A Marketing and Reception Analysis (Anna Bondestam som arbetarförfattare. En marknadsförings- och receptionsanalys)In the contemporary history of literature, the Finland-Swedish author, historian, and social democratic activist Anna Bondestam (1907–1995) is considered one of the few and foremost depicters of the Finland-Swedish working class. Even though this position might have seemed undisputable at the end of Bondestam’s career, with her having written several novels from a working-class perspective and five historic books about the Finland-Swedish working-class movement, this article addresses and analyzes the quite different official images of the author in the Finland-Swedish, Finnish-speaking and Swedish public spheres in the first half of her career in the 1940s and 50s. Through a study of publishing house marketing for her novel Lågt i tak (1944) along with analyses of the critical reception of three of her novels set in a working-class environment — Lågt i tak, Klyftan (1947) and Vägen till staden (1957) — the article shows the ways in which Bondestam, when it comes to the working-class perspective and the political message of her work, was marketed and perceived quite differently at the time, depending on cultural and national contexts. On the one hand, the article sheds light on how Bondestam was constructed as a working-class author over time and, on the other, shows the different ways the topic was handled by the cultural establishments in Sweden and among the Finnish-speaking and Swedish-speaking Finns respectively.</p

    Building Bridges from the Decoding Interview to Teaching Practice

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    This chapter describes a multidisciplinary faculty self-study about reciprocity in service-learning. The study began with each co-author participating in a Decoding interview. We describe how Decoding combined with collaborative self-study had a positive impact on our teaching practice.Institute for Scholarship of Teaching and Learnin
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