19,064 research outputs found
Big single rose in a glass jar, Melbourne, ca. 1955 [picture] /
Part of the collection: Sarah Chinnery photographic collection of New Guinea, England and Australia.; Big single rose in low jar. -- Accompanying notes from family.; Condition: Spots and stains on negative. Loss of image.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4554173
Hibiscus and a rose in a Wedgewood vase with two shells on a round table, Melbourne, ca. 1955 [picture] /
Part of the collection: Sarah Chinnery photographic collection of New Guinea, England and Australia.; Condition: Spots and stains on negative. Loss of image.; Single hibiscus and single rose, slender grey and silver vase, boy reaching up side, Wedgewood, two shells on round table. -- Accompanying notes from family.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4555089
Mary Rose: The Wreckage of Chronic Illness
Novelist Sarah Marie Graye discusses how the Mary Rose ship helped her reconceive chronic illness and traum
Water lilies in a bowl on a tray on a chair, Melbourne, ca. 1955 [picture] /
Part of the collection: Sarah Chinnery photographic collection of New Guinea, England and Australia.; Condition: Spots and stains on negative. Loss of image.; Water lilies in Agnes Davis's? rose bowl, on silver tray. -- Accompanying notes from family.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4555261
Daisies in a low bowl on a Chinese opium stool, Melbourne, ca. 1955 [picture] /
Part of the collection: Sarah Chinnery photographic collection of New Guinea, England and Australia.; Condition: Spots and stains on negative.; Daisies, silver rose bowl, on Chinese opium stool. -- Accompanying notes from family.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4554319
Rose and Sarah Marimon
Rose and Sarah Marimon are on their horses near their ranch by Whiterocks, Utah
The 'true use of reading' : Sarah Fielding and mid eighteenth-century literary strategies.
PhDThe aim of this thesis is to explore, by examining her life and
works, how Sarah Fielding (1710-68) established her identity as an author.
The definition of her role involves her notions of the functions of
writing and reading.
Sarah Fielding attempts to invite readers to form a sense of ties
by tacit understanding of her messages. As she believes that a work
of literature is produced through collaboration between the writer and
the reader, it is an important task in her view to show her attentiveness
toward reading practice. In her consideration of reading, she has two
distinct, even opposite views of her audience: on the one hand a familiar
and limited circle of readers with shared moral and cultural values and
on the other potential readers among the unknown mass of people. The
dual targets direct her to devise various strategies. She tries to
appeal to those who can endorse and appreciate her moral values as well
as her learning. Her writings and letters testify that she is sensitive
to the demands of the literary market, trying to lead the taste of readers
by inventing new forms.
The thesis opens with an overview of Sarah Fielding's career,
followed by a consideration of her critical attention to the roles of
reading. I go on to examine the narrative structures and strategies
she deploys, with a particular emphasis on her use of the epistolary
method. The following chapter deals with her attention to the reading
of the moral message tangibly embodied in her educational writing. It
is followed by an analysis of the activity which earned her a reputation
as a learned woman. Various as the forms of her works are, they invariably
reflect her attempt to balance herself between the two demands of
inventiveness and familiarity
First person - Sarah Alghamdi
ABSTRACT
First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Disease Models & Mechanisms, helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Sarah Alghamdi is first author on ‘ Contribution of model organism phenotypes to the computational identification of human disease genes’, published in DMM. Sarah is a PhD student in the lab of Robert Hoehndorf at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Thuwal, Saudi Arabia, investigating artificial intelligence, specifically knowledge representation and reasoning over biomedical data
Portrait of the English anthropologist Gregory Bateson, New Guinea, 1929 [picture] /
Part of the collection: Sarah Chinnery photographic collection of New Guinea, England and Australia.; Gregory Bateson, famous English anthropologist, New Guinea research in Bainings and Sepik, eventually lived and worked in the United States. Author of "Naven" and other works. -- Accompanying notes from family.; Inscription: "1929" -- On label. "Gregory Bateson, 'Naven' and other works" -- In red ink.; Sarah Chinnery no.: Part 2.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4506462
Portrait of the anthropologist Professor Hortense Powdermaker from Queens, New York, in New Guinea, 1929 [picture] /
Part of the collection: Sarah Chinnery photographic collection of New Guinea, England and Australia.; Inscriptions: "Professor Hortense Powdermaker, (Queens N.Y., U.S.A.) 'Life in Lesso [i.e. Lesu]' and other works" --In red ink. "1929" -- In pencil.; Professor Hortense Powdermaker, American anthropologist 1929 research in Lesu, New Ireland, New Guinea. Author of "Life in Lesu" and other works. -- Accompanying notes from family.; Sarah Chinnery no.: Part 2.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4506463
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