10,709 research outputs found

    Oral history interview with Kate Hart

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    Kate Hart, author and artist, talks her youth and how she became interested in writing young adult literature. She discusses her book, After the Fall, explaining the circumstances that led her to write the book. Hart comments on the creativity side as well as her process of writing and briefly talks about some of her other work.The Deep Roots: Oklahoma Authors Collection is a series of interviews with authors who discuss their lives, work, and creative processes

    Interview about historical fiction with Catherine Johnson, author of novels for young adults and children (audio recording)

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    Dr Kate Loveman interviews Catherine Johnson, the award-winning author of historical novels for children and young adults.  Catherine Johnson’s historical novels are principally set in the eighteenth-century and feature the adventures of young people who are Black or of mixed heritage.  The topics Catherine and Kate discuss include: the roles for historical fiction in representing the experiences of Black Britons; the appeal of the eighteenth-century for writers; the types of sources that can provide inspiration; the depiction of sensitive subject matter, such as slavery and sexual assault, in novels aimed at young people; and tips for aspiring authors of historical fiction.  This is an edited version of an interview recorded on 25 April 2022. It lasts 30 minutes. The interview was conducted as part of the ‘Reimagining the Restoration’ project, funded by the AHRC.</p

    Guidelines for Data Annotation

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    Included here are a coding manual and supplementary examples of gesture forms (in still images and video recordings) that informed the coding of the first author (Kate Mesh) and four project reliability coders

    Interview about historical fiction with Catherine Johnson, author of novels for young adults and children (transcript)

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    This is the transcript of an interview with Catherine Johnson, the award-winning author of historical novels for children and young adults.  Catherine Johnson’s historical novels are principally set in the eighteenth-century and feature the adventures of young people who are Black or of mixed heritage.  The topics Catherine discusses with Kate Loveman include: the roles for historical fiction in representing the experiences of Black Britons; the appeal of the eighteenth-century for writers; the types of sources that can provide inspiration; the depiction of sensitive subject matter, such as slavery and sexual assault, in novels aimed at young people; and tips for aspiring authors of historical fiction.  This is an intelligent transcript of the audio recording, which is publicly available. The interview took place on 25 April 2022. It was conducted as part of the ‘Reimagining the Restoration’ project, funded by the AHRC.</p

    Young People and Mental Health: How do young people want mental health support to be delivered?

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    In this article, Kim Heyes, Elaine Craig, Paul Gray, Kate Whittenbury, Lauren Barclay and Jessica Leigh (a group of researchers and young people) draw on a recent consultation to argue that the current system of mental health support for young people is broken

    Declining Unionization, Rising Inequality: an Interview with Kate Bronfenbrenner

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    Kate Bronfenbrenner is director of labor education research at the New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University. She worked for many years as an organizer with the United Woodcutters Association in Mississippi and the Service Employees International Union in Boston. She is the author, co-author and editor of numerous books and articles on union strategies

    Kate Greenaway's Alphabet (V)

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    Relief prints--wood engravings;Illustrated with color printed wood engravings. A miniature alphabet book with glazed pictorial boards. Each page contains an upper and lower case letter. Charming children crawling through and around each letter illustrate the book. This page depicts a young girl playing badminton around the letter "V."The daughter of an English wood engraver, Kate Greenaway was educated at home by tutors before going off to art school. Her mother had a children's clothing shop for which Kate designed and sewed dainty, long muslin gowns in a style that was similar to clothing from a century before. It was these designs that she made famous in her several books, postcards, and greeting cards and which are so quickly identifiable today (Pamela Harer, A Century of Alphabets). This is one of Greenaway's most common and popular books. George Routledge & Sons were located at 7 Broadway, Ludgate Hill from 1865-1889.Alphabet books

    Kate Richards: madness

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    Kate Richards’ bleakly beautiful, confronting and important book, Madness: A Memoir, describes her 15 years coping with psychosis and depression, and her long, hard-won journey back to sanity, with the help of a wise and compassionate psychologist. In this video, she speaks with Ranjana Srivastava, an oncologist and fellow author, about her experience –&nbsp;and about being able to write from deep within it, with expertise as both a medical researcher and writer. &nbsp

    Kate Greenaway's Alphabet (I)

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    Relief prints--wood engravings;Illustrated with color printed wood engravings. A miniature alphabet book with glazed pictorial boards. Each page contains an upper and lower case letter. Charming children crawling through and around each letter illustrate the book. This page depicts a young boy pulling a wheeled toy around the letter "I."The daughter of an English wood engraver, Kate Greenaway was educated at home by tutors before going off to art school. Her mother had a children's clothing shop for which Kate designed and sewed dainty, long muslin gowns in a style that was similar to clothing from a century before. It was these designs that she made famous in her several books, postcards, and greeting cards and which are so quickly identifiable today (Pamela Harer, A Century of Alphabets). This is one of Greenaway's most common and popular books. George Routledge & Sons were located at 7 Broadway, Ludgate Hill from 1865-1889.Alphabet books

    Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer

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    Photograph of Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palme
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