16,454 research outputs found

    Cynthia Shin-Yi Wang: Formulaic State of Transformation Show Card

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    Show card featuring alumni Cynthia Shin-Yi Wang. April 22 - 26, 2003

    Digitized material from "'Shin shinfujin' kaisetsu, sōmokuji, sakuin"

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    Tables of contents and author index for the eight-volume set Shin shin fujin.The Mellon Foundation - Council on East Asian Libraries Innovation Grants for East Asian Librarian

    Poetry Reading: Sun Yung Shin

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    Join us for a poetry reading by Minnesota Book Award winner Sun Yung Shin and discussion on what sanctuary means for the Twin Cities. The event is co-sponsored with the St. Thomas English Department. Sun Yung Shin is the editor of A Good Time for the Truth: Race in Minnesota and the author of two previous poetry/essay collections—Rough, and Savageand Skirt Full of Black (both from Coffee House Press). She is also the co-editor of Outsiders Within: Writing on Transracial Adoption, and the author of bilingual illustrated book for children Cooper’s Lesson. She has received artist grants from the Bush Foundation, the Minnesota State Arts Board, the McKnight Foundation, and the Jerome Foundation. She is teaching or has taught at St. Catherine University, Hamline University, Macalester College, the University of Minnesota, the Perpich Center for Arts Education, Intermedia Arts, Minneapolis public schools, and the Loft Literary Center

    MCQ UIA Health Alliance Network

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    Supplement material for the manuscript published at Management Communication Quarterly, authored by Rong Wang (Vanderbilt University) and Jieun Shin (University of Florida)

    Sun Yung Shin Reading & Conversation

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    Sun Yung Shin was born in Seoul, Korea and was raised in the Chicago area. She is a poet, writer, and cultural worker. She is the editor of What We Hunger For: Refugee and Immigrant Stories on Food and Family (2021) and of A Good Time for the Truth: Race in Minnesota, author of poetry collections The Wet Hex; Unbearable Splendor (finalist for the 2017 PEN USA Literary Award for Poetry, winner of the 2016 Minnesota Book Award for poetry); Rough, and Savage; and Skirt Full of Black (winner of the 2007 Asian American Literary Award for poetry), co-editor of Outsiders Within: Writing on Transracial Adoption, and author of bilingual illustrated book for children Cooper’s Lesson. She lives in Minneapolis where she co-directs the community organization Poetry Asylum with poet Su Hwang

    The Medical Texts of Ma-wang-tui [Keiji Yamada (ed.), Shin hatsugen Chūgoku kagakushi shiryō no kankyū]

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    Pregadio Fabrizio. The Medical Texts of Ma-wang-tui [Keiji Yamada (ed.), Shin hatsugen Chūgoku kagakushi shiryō no kankyū]. In: Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie, vol. 5, 1989. Numéro spécial Etudes taoïstes II / Special Issue on Taoist Studies II en l'honneur de Maxime Kaltenmark. pp. 381-386

    The Medical Texts of Ma-wang-tui [Keiji Yamada (ed.), Shin hatsugen Chūgoku kagakushi shiryō no kankyū]

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    Pregadio Fabrizio. The Medical Texts of Ma-wang-tui [Keiji Yamada (ed.), Shin hatsugen Chūgoku kagakushi shiryō no kankyū]. In: Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie, vol. 5, 1989. Numéro spécial Etudes taoïstes II / Special Issue on Taoist Studies II en l'honneur de Maxime Kaltenmark. pp. 381-386

    Living Shin

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    In this chapter, the author reflects on the ways that living Shin has enriched her work as a university professor, professional dancer, choreographer, and human being. She first talks about her history in somatic modalities of Ideokinesis, Laban, Keleman, and Hanna Somatics, along with their relation to Shin Somatics and how this work has benefited her professionally and personally. She then describes her applications of somatic knowledge to dance pedagogy, creating choreography, and the teaching and practice of yoga, healing, and wellness at Eastwest Somatics Institute. She also discusses her personal transformative somatic experiences and concludes by sharing key findings and insights that ground her in living Shin.</p

    An interview with Naomi L. Shin

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    Naomi L. Shin is an Associate Professor of Linguistics and Hispanic Linguistics at the University of New Mexico. Her primary interests include child language acquisition, bilingualism, language contact, and sociolinguistics. Her research focuses on patterns of morphosyntactic variation, examining how these patterns are acquired during childhood and how they change in situations of language contact. Her articles have appeared in journals such as Journal of Child Language, Cognitive Linguistics, International Journal of Bilingualism, Language Acquisition, Language Variation and Change, Language in Society, Foreign Language Annals, Spanish in Context, Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics, and International Journal of the Sociology of Language. She is the co-author of Gramática Española: Variación Social, which explores grammar in a way that emphasizes the social underpinnings of language.Website: http://www.unm.edu/~naomishin/index.htm
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