2,794 research outputs found

    Christina and Me

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    Bestselling Maine author Christina Baker Kline tells the background story of why she chose to write her novel Christina\u27s World which is based on the relationship between Maine artist, Andrew Wyeth and his muse, Christina Olson

    Christina Gillis, author of Writing on Stone: Scenes from a Maine Island Life,

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    Christina Gillis, author of Writing on Stone: Scenes from a Maine Island Life, delves into old letters written by Maine writer Ruth Moore in the 1950s. Moore was selling her family\u27s Gotts Island house to Phyllis and Richard Strauss, Gillis\u27s sister and brother-in-law

    sj-pdf-1-chc-10.1177_13674935211052148 – Supplemental Material for Clinician and healthcare managers’ perspectives on the delivery of secondary and tertiary pediatric weight management services

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    Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-chc-10.1177_13674935211052148 for Clinician and healthcare managers’ perspectives on the delivery of secondary and tertiary pediatric weight management services by Jennifer Cohen, Shirley Alexander, Christina Signorelli, Kathryn Williams, Kyra A Sim, Lenina Chennariyil and Louise A Baur in Journal of Child Health Care</p

    supplement_material - What instruments should we use to assess paediatric decision-making interventions? A narrative review

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    supplement_material for What instruments should we use to assess paediatric decision-making interventions? A narrative review by Eden G Robertson, Jennifer Cohen, Christina Signorelli, David M Grant, Joanna E Fardell and Claire E Wakefield in Journal of Child Health Care</p

    Supplemental Material - Patterns of physical activity and sedentary behavior in child and adolescent cancer survivors assessed using wrist accelerometry: A cluster analysis approach

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    Supplemental Material for Patterns of physical activity and sedentary behavior in child and adolescent cancer survivors assessed using wrist accelerometry: A cluster analysis approach by Lauren Ha, Claire E. Wakefield, Claudio Diaz, David Mizrahi, Christina Signorelli, Kalina Yacef, David Simar in Health Informatics Journal.</p

    Religious intellectuals : the poetic gravity of Emily Brontë and Christina Rossetti

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    This thesis examines the writing of Emily Brontë and Christina Rossetti in terms of its expression of religious culture and belief. It is my argument that Brontë and Rossetti experienced religion as intellectuals, questioning and exploring doctrine and dogma neither as sentimental lady Christians nor dismissive, secular critics. I contend that by close reading their poetry, the genre both women privileged as most appropriate for the consideration of religious matters, the reader may trace the sermons and theological works they read. Moreover, their writing, I suggest, evinces their intellectual response to theological, ecclesiological and ecclesiastical developments that took place in the nineteenth century. I thus label Brontë and Rossetti 'religious intellectuals,' a phrase suggestive of their intense understanding of, rather than their mild acquaintance with, religious debate. Many women writing within the nineteenth century found that religion granted them a field within which to freely read and research, but were denied the professional title of 'theologian.' Brontë and Rossetti are thus examples of a wider phenomenon wherein women encountered religion like scholars, one disregarded by current criticism unable as it is to categorize a female activity simultaneously religious and intellectual. I use Brontë and Rossetti as examples of what I call the 'religious intellectual' because they represent different sides of this classification. Where Brontë struggled away from her Methodist background, serving as a cultural commentator on its enthusiastic belief-system, Rossetti forged a scholarly identity as a late member of the High Church Oxford Movement. Both poets, I contend, wrote about religion in order to signal their intellectual ability. I conclude that Brontë's interest in Methodism and Rossetti's fascination with Tractarianism reveals the poets to be both independent of family pressures and false consciousness, and fully engaged with a subject central to their age

    Leonora Christina

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    Short presentation of Danish author Leonora Christina and her main work

    Beyond cost savings: The value of OER and open pedagogy for student learning

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    This workshop was delivered by Dr. Christina Hendricks, from the University of British Columbia, for the 2018 Open Education Week Celebration at Mount Royal. The presentation outline approaches to open education - including OER, open pedagogy, and open educational practices

    Book Review on Christina Sharpe’s Ordinary Notes

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    This is a brief book review of&nbsp;Ordinary Notes&nbsp;by Christina Sharpe. Published in April 2023, the text deals with various aspects of Black life, such as memory, trauma, and ongoing racial violence. Being an acclaimed scholar of the Black community, Christina Sharpe shares a surfeit of memories throughout her text, which is why I found this book to be an excellent addition to Black memory studies. The author argues on the functionality of museums and memorials. While many may insist on the necessity of these sites of memory, the author argues that memorial narratives fail to provide ‘reconciliation and healing’. She also asserts how language is usually manipulated by white supremacists, and hence, memory is manipulated as well. Motherhood is also a dominant topic that Sharpe explores in her book

    Christina of Markyate – introduction to the “life”

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    This article presents information about Christina, saint, eremite and subsequent superior in Markyate, who lived in England in the 12th century. The study aims to elucidate the person of the saint, so little known in Poland. In order to encourage reading of the “Life,” the author, apart from sketching the saint’s biography, discusses the role of women during the Middle Ages as well as refers to an extraordinary friendship between Christina and an abbot from one of the most influential monasteries of the twelfth-century England - Geoffrey of Gorham – who was a cause of damnatio memoriae after his death
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