1,846 research outputs found

    Marriage record of Shaw, Charlie and Sams, Katie

    No full text
    Marriage license for Charlie Shaw and Katie Sams. Joseph Sexton was the officiant

    Lower Court Popular Constitutionalism

    No full text
    Scholars of popular constitutionalism have persuasively argued that an array of nonjudicial actors—social movements, the federal political branches, state and local political entities—play an important role in shaping constitutional meaning. To date, the accounts of such scholars have largely focused on the ways that constitutional doctrine at the Supreme Court level can be infiltrated and shaped by such popular constitutional influences. In this Essay, Professor Katie Eyer draws on the events following the Obama Administration’s February 2011 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) announcement—and the history of gay equality litigation that preceded it—to develop a theory of the lower federal courts as participants in the popular constitutionalism dialogue

    New Jersey

    No full text
    In a crowded and diversely populated state such as New Jersey, social networking takes place in both physical and virtual forms.Anderson, K. E. (2011). New Jersey. In G. A. Barnett (Ed.), Encyclopedia of social networks (pp. 642-644). Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications.This is the author's final version of a chapter, New Jersey, in Encyclopedia of Social Networks, George A. Barnett, editor. The published two volume work is available at http://www.sagepub.com/books/Book23436

    Anthropological Networks

    No full text
    Not only have anthropologists contributed to the study of social networks, they have also created their own anthropological networks in order to communicate and collaborate while conducting their study of human behaviors.Anderson, K. E. (2011). Anthropological networks. In G. A. Barnett (Ed.), Encyclopedia of social networks (pp. 44-48). Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications.This is the author's final version of a chapter, Anthropological Networks, in Encyclopedia of Social Networks, George A. Barnett, editor. The published two volume work is available at http://www.sagepub.com/books/Book23436

    So let him stare, I do not care, I shall not go away [first line of chorus]

    No full text
    strophic with choruspiano and voice (solo and satb chorus)ads on back cover for W.F. Shaw stock41-3Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box 135, Item 068Words by Miss Katie Belle Wichmann. Music by E. Mack.J.M. Armstrong, Music Typographer, 138 S. Eighth St

    Native Americans

    No full text
    The social networks of Native Americans are as diverse as the population, providing connections and communications within tribes, regions and nations as well as among these groups and with other populations.Anderson, K. E. (2011). Native Americans. In G. A. Barnett (Ed.), Encyclopedia of social networks (pp. 573-575). Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications.This is the author's final version of a chapter, Native Americans, in Encyclopedia of Social Networks, George A. Barnett, editor. The published two volume work is available at http://www.sagepub.com/books/Book23436

    So let him stare, I do not care, I shall not go away [first line of chorus]

    No full text
    strophic with choruspiano and voice (solo and satb chorus)ads on back cover for W.F. Shaw stock41-3Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box 135, Item 068Words by Miss Katie Belle Wichmann. Music by E. Mack.J.M. Armstrong, Music Typographer, 138 S. Eighth St

    Storytelling

    No full text
    Once upon a time before words were written, before cultures and societies were observed and analyzed there was storytelling. Storytelling has been a part of humanity since people were able to communicate and respond to the basic biological urge to explain, educate and enlighten. Cave drawings, traditional dances, poems, songs, and chants are all examples of early storytelling. Stories pass on historical, cultural, and moral information and provide escape and relief from the everyday struggle to survive. Storytelling takes place in all cultures in a variety of different forms. Studying these forms requires an interdisciplinary approach involving anthropology, psychology, linguistics, history, library science, theater, media studies and other related disciplines. New technologies and new approaches have brought about a renewed interest in the varied aspects and elements of storytelling, broadening our understanding and appreciation of its complexity.Anderson, K. E. (2010). Storytelling. In H. J. Birx (Ed.), 21st century anthropology: a reference handbook (pp. 277-286). Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications.This is the author's final version of Chapter 28, Storytelling, in 21st Century Anthropology: A Reference Handbook, H. James Birx, editor. The published two volume work is available at http://www.sagepub.com/books/Book23180

    Does Anyone Have A Quarter?

    No full text
    Chapter 12 of: SpongeBob SquarePants and Philosophy: Soaking up Secrets Under the Sea, edited by Joseph FoyAnderson, Katie Elson. (2011). Does Anyone Have A Quarter? In J.J. Foy (Ed.), SpongeBob SquarePants and Philosophy: Soaking up Secrets under the Sea! (pp. 155-168). Chicago, Ill.: Open Court

    Transatlantic drift: The ebb and flow of dance music (podcast)

    No full text
    I contributed an episode to the New Books Network podcast series looking at my last book, with my Transatlantic Drift co-author, Katie Milestone. Katie takes the story from WWII to the Millennium, then I carry it from there to the Millennium.N/
    corecore