137 research outputs found

    Weirdo, No. 18

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    28 volumes : illustrations. Frequency: quarterly. Publication dates: No. 1 (spring, 1981), ceased with no. 28 (summer, 1993). Editor: R. Crumb. With issue #10, P. Bagge became editor; with issue #18, Crumb\u27s wife, Aline Kominsky-Crumb became editor (except for issue #25, which was again edited by Bagge).Color illustrations on covers, b&w interiors. Early issues of Weirdo reflect Crumb\u27s interests at the time outsider art, fumetti, Church of the SubGenius-type anti-propaganda and assorted weirdness. It also introduced artists such as Peter Bagge, Dori Seda and Dennis Worden. No. 18 Contributors: Robert Crumb, Diane Noomin, Peter Bagge, Justin Green, Michael Dougan, Aline Kominsky-Crumb, Dori Seda, Spain Rodriguez, Linda Crothers, Carol Tyler, and more. Library has two copies of no. 27. The Adler Archive of Underground Comix, Gift of Bill Adler.https://digitalcommons.risd.edu/specialcollections_adlerarchive_undergroundcomix/1117/thumbnail.jp

    Editorial: Special Issue in Honour of Diane Larsen-Freeman’s Contributions to Language Teaching and Second Language Development

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    We are pleased to announce the latest edition of this special issue of LTRQ in honour of Professor Diane Larsen-Freeman to celebrate her landmark achievements and enormous influence in language teaching, language learning, second language development, and teacher education. As the major papers we assembled in this special issue have provided a comprehensive review of Diane’s celebratory career as a language teacher, researcher, book author, journal and book editor, and teacher educator, in this editorial, we will just briefly discuss and summarize the different sections of papers that are targeting the major themes of areas where Diane’s long-lasting influence has been felt

    Ep047 about foodways, and folklore.

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    Diane Tye is a Professor in the Department of Folklore, Memorial University. Most of her research over the last twenty-five years has explored intersections of folklore and gender and with Pauline Greenhill she is co-editor of Undisciplined Women and Unsettling Assumptions.  For the last decade her work has included examinations of foodways in Atlantic Canada. She is author of the book, Baking as Biography. A Life Story in Recipes, that tells the story of her mother’s life through her recipe collection, as well as articles that explore a range of foodways topics from the food we eat on storm days, to the significance of making family recipes, and the cultural meanings of regionally iconic foods.  We discuss Diane’s academic interest in food, her book Baking as a Biography, food and nostalgia, gender and food, and where her work has taken her

    Values and Design

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    It has long been recognized that technology is value-laden. In the last few decades, a number of approaches—such as value sensitive design (VSD)—have been developed to systematically and explicitly address values in design. This contribution discusses four general issues that any approach aiming at integrating values into design should address: (1) what values are, and how to identify the values that should be integrated into a particular design; (2) the conceptualization, operationalization and specification of values which is required to make values operational in the design process; (3) issues of conflicting values and possible ways to address them; (4) the possibility of value change and options to address it during design.This publication is part of the project ValueChange that has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 788321. Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Ethics & Philosophy of Technolog

    Weirdo, No. 28

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    28 volumes : illustrations. Frequency: quarterly. Publication dates: No. 1 (spring, 1981), ceased with no. 28 (summer, 1993). Editor: R. Crumb. With issue #10, P. Bagge became editor; with issue #18, Crumb\u27s wife, Aline Kominsky-Crumb became editor (except for issue #25, which was again edited by Bagge).Color illustrations on covers, b&w interiors. Cover title of no. 28 (Summer 1993) entitled Verre d\u27eau [Glass of water] and called one-time-only special international issue, absolutely the last issue ever. Early issues of Weirdo reflect Crumb\u27s interests at the time outsider art, fumetti, Church of the SubGenius-type anti-propaganda and assorted weirdness. It also introduced artists such as Peter Bagge, Dori Seda and Dennis Worden. No. 28 Contributors: Robert Crumb, Robert Armstrong, Sasa Rekezic, Roy Tompkins, Florence Cestac, Ted Jouflas, Bill Griffith, Debbie Drechsler, Jean-Christoph Menu, Spain Rodriguez, Placid, Peter Bagge, Baudoin Diane Noomin, Willem, Aline Kominsky-Crumb, Caroline Wedier, Carol Tyler Matt Konture, Phoebe Gloeckner, Mary Fleener, Bob Kathman, Sasa Rakezic, and more. Library has two copies of no. 27. The Adler Archive of Underground Comix, Gift of Bill Adler.https://digitalcommons.risd.edu/specialcollections_adlerarchive_undergroundcomix/1126/thumbnail.jp

    Food for nought

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    The short story, "Food for nought", is written by the listed author above, Shashi Bhat. Now in its 48th year, Best Canadian Stories has long championed the short story form and highlighted the work of many of the writers, throughout their respective careers, who have gone on to shape the Canadian literary canon. Caroline Adderson, Margaret Atwood, Clark Blaise, Lynn Coady, Mavis Gallant, Zsuzsi Gartner, Douglas Glover, Steven Heighton, Isabel Huggan, Mark Anthony Jarman, Norman Levine, Rohinton Mistry, Alice Munro, Leon Rooke, Diane Schoemperlen, Russell Smith, Linda Svendsen, Kathleen Winter, and many others have appeared in its pages over the years and decades, making Best Canadian Stories the go-to source for what’s new in Canadian fiction writing for close to five decades. A continuation of not only a series, but a legacy in Canadian letters. --From publisher description.Published

    Things Don't Really Exist Until You Give Them a Name: Unpacking Urban Heritage

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    Urban built environments are spatial and material archives. Streets, buildings, open spaces, or infrastructures are registers of historical negotiations and repositories of data. Stories of power, geopolitics, economic systems, labour and culture can be revealed through road names and construction materials, portals and pediments, park benches and chimneys. Embodying our desires, needs, and resources, they condition how we live and interact with each other, and trigger countless reinterpretations and re-appropriations. Most of this dense layering is not immediately legible; it has not been decoded. Rather it is part of a more intuitive, lived sense of “urbanity” that generates contemporary individual and collective senses of identity and belonging. These complex urban palimpsests form the constitutive stages upon, with and against which everyday and extraordinary cultural life is performed.History, Form & Aesthetic

    Policy and practice in harm reduction in Australasia

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    This chapter has a different format from the other chapters. The author originally commissioned to write the chapter was unable to deliver it late in the process. We asked a number of distinguished experts from Australia and New Zealand to write a brief piece on their perceptions of the current situation of harm reduction in their countries. What we have now are six contributions and a brief commentary. There is a small overlap between some contributions but this is the nature of these individual contributions and as such they have remained as integrated pieces

    . 13 Año 5 (1998) mayo-agosto. Dimensión Antropológica

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    - La explotación del maguey pulquero en la zona de Metztitlan: datos etnográficos y arqueológicos por Ana María Álvarez Palma, Gianfranco Canssiano y Alberto Villa Kamel. - Párrocos y médicos en torno a las parturientas: un siglo en contra de las comadronas por Marcela Dávalos. - Una visión histórica de la parroquia de San Gabriel Arcángel, Tacuba por Teresa E. Serrano Espinosa y Emma Pérez-Rocha. - El derecho indígena frente al espejo de América Latina por María Magdalena Gómez Rivera. - La transferencia de riesgos, microproducción y la subcontratación en las industrias de la ropa y del calzado en Lima, Perú por Annelou Ypeij. - Epéntesis y organización prosódica en pame norte por Heriberto Avelino. - Larissa Adler Lomnitz y Marisol Pérez Lizaur, Una familia de la élite mexicana, 1820-1980. Parentesco, clase y cultura, México, Alianza Editorial (Colección Raíces y Razones), la. ed. en español, 1993, 313 pp. por Gilda Cubillo Moreno. - Ignacio Guzmán Betancourt y Eréndira Nansen (eds.), Memoria del coloquio: la obra de Antonio de Nebrija y su recepción en la Nueva España. Quince estudios nebrisenses, México, INAH (Científica, 353). 1997, 209 pp. por Dora Pellicer. - Diane Wolf (ed.), Feminist Dilemmas in Fieldwork, Boulder, Colorado, WestviewPress, 1996 por María J. Rodríguez-Shadow y Cristina Lirón
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