6,105 research outputs found
An Interview with Tony David Sampson: Author of Virality: Contagion Theory in the Age of Networks
Tony D. Sampson is Reader in Digital Culture and Communication in the School of Arts and Digital Industries (ADI) at the University of East London, where he directs the EmotionUX lab, supervising research on the cognitive, emotional, and affective aspects of user experience. In 2013, he co-founded Club Critical Theory, an organization dedicated to the application of critical theory in everyday life in Southend-on-Sea, Essex. Tony is the author of Virality: Contagion Theory in the Age of Networks and The Assemblage Brain: Sense Making in Neuroculture, both from the University of Minnesota Press. He blogs at viralcontagion.wordpress.com.
The editors of this special NANO issue are delighted to have the opportunity to talk with Tony about how his work touches on issues of imitation and contagion—a loaded term unpacked within his 2012 book
MU student Tony Williams
MU student Tony Williams, b&w.https://mds.marshall.edu/parthenon_photo_morgue/1504/thumbnail.jp
Rural youth in transition: Williams Lake
Audio recording of Dr. Tony Arruda's April 2001 presentation to the Nanaimo Historical Society about rural youth in Williams Lake.https://library.viu.ca/libinfo/harmfullanguagestatemen
Tony Williams, stage actor
Tony Williams, stage actorTo order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see:
http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction
Please cite the Order NumberScanned at 600ppi with an Epson 20000 flatbed scanner. Image then rotated, cropped, level-adjusted, and sharpened using Photoshop CS3. Converted to a JPEG2000 image upon ingest into CONTENTdm
Tony Williams, Jacksonville High School Student
Tony Williams was a student at Jacksonville High School Student in the 1960s. (circa 1969)https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/21742/thumbnail.jp
Recommended from our members
Tony Williams Tribute
Recital presented at the UNT College of Music Kenton Hall
The campaign for democratic socialism 1960-1964.
PhDIn early 1960 it seemed likely that the official Labour
Party defence policy would be defeated by a unilateralist
resolution at the Scarborough Conference. In response to
this possibility the Campaign for Democratic Socialism,
or CDS, was established.
The CDS projected the image of a grass-roots movement
inspired by Gaitskell's "fight and fight again" speech.
But it was run by a Campaign Committee which included
leading members of the Party like Tony Crosland, Roy
Jenkins and Patrick Gordon Walker, as well as less well
known members like Bill Rodgers, Dick Taverne, Philip
Williams, Brian Walden, Denis Howell and David Marquand.
This highly talented group launched an elaborate and
successful lobbying, publicity and briefing operation
which was influential in overturning the unilateralist
vote at the Blackpool Conference of 1961. After Blackpool
the Campaign helped many of its leading members find
seats in the House of Commons while continuing to put the
"revisionist" case through its newspaper Campaign.
The importance of the CDS in the history of the Labour
Party is, primarily, as the first internal pressure group
organised by the right of the Party. It was also the
first internal Party group to use such sophisticated
lobbying techniques. Moreover, the subsequent careers of
the leading members of the Campaign influenced the
development of the Labour Party. The CDS was an important
formative political action for many of them. Finally many
of the CDS supporters set-up or joined the SDP when it
was launched
The marriage record of Couch, Tony and Williams, Jody
Marriage license for Tony Couch and Jody Williams. Auburn H. Erwin was the officiant
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Tony Williams to D. W. Kempner sharing New Years joy and how their company can offer suits to everyone who desires
Too-Simple Ceremony Marks Tony Williams' 70th
A small crowd turned out to celebrate the 70th birthday of Pan Legend Anthony ‘Tony’ Williams. Williams who took no more than six months of formal music lessons, went on to become a composer from as early as 1956. In 1974 he wrote the famous “Pan Down Fifth Avenue” as a memorial of a tour to New York by Pan Am North Stars. William’s is credited with the invention of the ‘Spiderweb pan’. This pan was the first attempt at locating notes in the fourths and fifths sequence. He also introduced the double-cello pan
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