8,060 research outputs found
Janet Scott and Jane Ragsdale Interview, February 27, 2003
Janet Scott and Jane Ragsdale describe their backgrounds as feminists and their respective definitions of feminism. They each describes their initial involvement in In Other Words, a Missoula, Montana feminist forum radio program on NPR. Scott and Ragsdale describe the various focuses of the program ranging from feminist and women’s issues, to the environment, social justice, war, and education.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/mtfeminist/1045/thumbnail.jp
Janet Laura Scott Correspondence
Entries include correspondence with the Maine State Library concerning illustrations for an upcoming book on Scott\u27s artistic personal stationery
Peter L. Scott holding Okanagan Ayrshire Fintry Janet in China
Peter L. Scott holding Fintry Janet. Vernon News scan 1933-04-06
Giving Evil a Name: Buffy's Glory, Angel's Jasmine, Blood Magic, and Name Magic
Peer reviewe
Review of Tolkien, J.R.R., trans; ed. Christopher Tolkien. Beowulf: A Translation and Commentary. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014.
Review of Tolkien's Beowulf translation focuses on its relation to his other works rather than the translation per se
Psyche in New York: The Devil Wears Prada Updates the Myth
The Psyche and Cupid story is a central myth of female maturation, among its other meanings. At its core, it is a story of a powerful older woman, a mother-figure, controlling a younger woman’s path to maturity, seemingly blocking her way by imposing impossible tasks, but through these tasks teaching her what she needs to learn to become an adult. In the Greek myth, the marker of maturity is full and socially sanctioned union with the god/husband; in the movie The Devil Wears Prada, the marker becomes a job that both “pays the rent” and that the young woman can hold with integrity and independence. I will also look at such diverse sources as the Tam Lin legend, Hayao Miyazake’s Spirited Away, C.S. Lewis’s retelling of the Psyche myth in Till We Have Faces, and the movie Julie & Julia as variants of the underlying “mother”/maiden conflict.This is the Version of Record (VoR) of the article originally published in Mythlore (2012). Mythlore is available in the electronic database Expanded Academic ASAP.Peer reviewe
[Review of] Fastitocalon: Studies in Fantasticism Ancient to Modern 4.1/2, editor in chief Thomas Honegger and Fanfan Chen; and Tolkien Studies XI, editors Michael D.C. Drout, Verlyn Flieger, and David Bratman.
Review of special issue of Fastitocalon and the eleventh issue of Tolkien Studies.This is the Version of Record (VoR) of the article originally published in Mythlore (2015). Mythlore is available in the electronic database Expanded Academic ASAP
Review of The Body in Tolkien's Legendarium, ed. Chris Vaccaro
Review of edited essay collection. Considers each item in the collection individually and the collection as a whole.This is the Version of Record (VoR) of the article originally published in Mythlore (2014). Mythlore is available in the electronic database Expanded Academic ASAP
World Clothing and Fashion: An Encyclopedia of History, Culture, and Social Influence
Purchase of this item is not recommended for reference collections
Barrel-rides and She-elves: Audience and "Anticipation" in Peter Jackson's Hobbit Trilogy
Peter Jackson’s Hobbit trilogy, to the audience that loved the Lord of the Rings films, is an exciting opportunity to revisit Tolkien’s fantastic world and see favorite characters acting out their earlier adventures. The reader of the books, though, is often likely to find the difference in tone between the children’s book and the vastly expanded films jarring. This talk will explore audience expectations, the difficulties of filming a “prequel” after a “sequel,” and issues of “anticipation” in relation to character development
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