Academic literature on the topic 'Shirley'

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Journal articles on the topic "Shirley"

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Willis, Ian. "“My box of memories”: An Australian Country Girl Goes to London." Anglica. An International Journal of English Studies, no. 30/1 (September 1, 2021): 53–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.7311/0860-5734.30.1.04.

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In 1954 a young country woman from New South Wales, Shirley Dunk, ex- ercised her agency and travelled to London. This was a journey to the home of her fore- fathers and copied the activities of other country women who made similar journeys. Some of the earliest of these journeys were undertaken by the wives and daughters of the 19th-century rural gentry. This research project will use a qualitative approach in an examination of Shirley’s journey archive complemented with supplementary interviews and stories of other travellers. Shirley nostalgically recalled the sense of adventure that she experienced as she left Sydney for London by ship and travelled through the United Kingdom and Europe. The article will address questions posed by the journey for Shirley and her travelling companion, Beth, and how they dealt with these forces as tourists and travellers. Shirley’s letters home were reported in the country press and reminiscent of soldier’s wartime letters home that described their tales as tourists in foreign lands. The narrative will show that Shirley, as an Australian country girl, was exposed to the cosmo- politan nature of the metropole, as were other women. The paper will explore how Shirley was subject to the forces of modernity and consumerism at a time when rural women were often limited to domesticity.
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Strakhov, Elizaveta. "Anthology versus Miscellany: John Shirley's Scribal Agency and the Fantasy of Origins in the Medieval Compilation." Huntington Library Quarterly 85, no. 4 (December 2022): 603–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hlq.2022.a920286.

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abstract: In Trinity College Cambridge MS R.3.20, John Shirley offers a famously enigmatic rubric to his copy of Chaucer's Complaint of Venus . He cites Chaucer as the translator of the piece and notes, correctly, that Oton de Granson composed the English poem's original. He then claims that Chaucer's poem is describing a court scandal: an adulterous affair between John Holland, Earl of Huntington, and Isabel of York, daughter of King Pedro of Castile and sisterin-law to John of Gaunt. Shirley's rubrics thus appear to construct a very loose Anglo-Iberian connection for Chaucer's translation of Granson from French to English, so loose as to be generally dismissed by scholars as Shirley's gossipy invention. As it happens, however, Oton de Granson was imprisoned in Castile in 1372, in the same year that Isabel came from Castile to England to marry Edmund Langley, Duke of York. This actual Iberian connection is strengthened by the existence of a fifteenth-century Catalan miscellany that anthologizes Catalan poets with Granson, including the ballades that form Chaucer's source as well as poetry written by one of Granson's fellow captives from 1372. From this perspective, Shirley's shadowy evocation of Castile starts to look less like gossip and more like an attempt to make sense of lyric's transregional movements while underscoring Chaucer's internationalism. What is at stake for Shirley in insisting on this disorientingly transregional moment? What is at stake—for both Shirley and the Catalan compiler—in collecting lyric that moves so porously across geographic boundaries for the purposes of a canonizing project? How, in short, might these lyric miscellanies challenge our idea of nationalizing canon construction?
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Spacks, Barry. "Shirley." Hopkins Review 6, no. 2 (2013): 193. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/thr.2013.0038.

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Salvaña, Edsel Maurice T. "Shirley." Journal of Palliative Medicine 7, no. 2 (April 2004): 307–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/109662104773709459.

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Hidayat, Syarif, Ledya Juliandina, and Rusydi M. Yusuf. "The Cultural Identity of the Main Character of the Film Green Book." Pioneer: Journal of Language and Literature 14, no. 2 (December 31, 2022): 392. http://dx.doi.org/10.36841/pioneer.v14i2.2344.

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Being an African-American in the United States of America is challenging due to the persistent racism in that country. One of the worst effects of racism is losing someone’s identity. Despite their best efforts, African Americans still struggle to fit into American culture and find acceptance. This study was conducted because of this issue. This research is entitled “The Cultural Identity Analysis of the Main Character “Don Shirley” in the film Green Book”. This study aims to learn more about Don Shirley's struggles with cultural identity and his eventual identity negotiation. This descriptive qualitative research was conducted using Stuart Hall’s theory of identity. This research reveals that Don Shirley initially adopts the identity of a white-cultured guy due to the influence of racism on his thoughts, words, and actions. However, this does not guarantee his acceptance by society. Therefore, he finally embraces himself and negotiates his African-American identity.
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Dopson, Laurence. "Burns, Shirley." Nursing Standard 26, no. 15 (December 14, 2011): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.7748/ns2011.12.26.15.35.p7194.

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Sterritt, David. "Project Shirley." Quarterly Review of Film and Video 34, no. 6 (May 19, 2017): 583–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10509208.2017.1326003.

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Butler, U. S. G. "Shirley Ratcliffe." BMJ 349, jul21 11 (July 21, 2014): g4716. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.g4716.

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Krane, Kenneth S. "Hyperfine interaction studies in the David Shirley group, 1960–1975. II. Perturbed angular correlations and Mössbauer effect." Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A 40, no. 4 (July 2022): 043208. http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/6.0001928.

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In addition to the low-temperature nuclear orientation studies discussed in Paper I, David Shirley's research group at Berkeley was renowned for other types of studies of the interaction of probe nuclei with their electromagnetic environment, particularly perturbed angular correlations and the Mössbauer effect. The present paper discusses these other fields of research into hyperfine interactions and gives examples of the contributions of the Shirley group toward elucidating these interactions.
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Vanskike, Elliott. "Consistent Inconsistencies: The Transvestite Actress Madame Vestris and Charlotte Brontë's Shirley." Nineteenth-Century Literature 50, no. 4 (March 1, 1996): 464–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2933924.

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In this paper I propose the transvestite actress Madame Vestris as an interpretive doppelgänger for the title character in Charlotte Brontë's novel Shirley. Vestris crossed gender lines not only in her cross-dressed performances on the Victorian stage but also in her incursion into the male-dominated realm of theater ownership. In this way she is like Shirley Keeldar, the fiercely independent female factory owner whom Brontë consistently depicts in masculine terms. Most critics read Shirley as a narrative and thematic fiasco because the protofeminist momentum that the novel accumulates from Brontë's portrayal of an independent, headstrong female character is brought to a halt when Shirley subjugates herself to a meek and weasly man. The ending of the novel has been almost unanimously dismissed as Brontë's submission to the very patriarchal culture that she set out to critique when she created the character of Shirley Keeldar. However, far from being the low point of Brontë's writing, the ending of the novel elevates the writing into a high satirical mode that only serves to intensify Brontë's criticism of society's treatment of women. Through reading Shirley by means of the narrative and gender disruptions that Vestris's performances staged, we can understand this curious narrative reversal at the end of the novel as a motivated strategy on the part of Brontë, not a lapse of craft.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Shirley"

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Roberts, Suzanne. "Representations of chivalry, gender relationships and the roles of women in the plays of James Shirley /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1994. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phr647.pdf.

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Crowther, Stefania. "James Shirley and the Restoration Stage." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2017. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/97559/.

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James Shirley is a distinctly Caroline playwright: his first play was performed in the year of Charles I’s coronation, 1625, and his last the year of the outbreak of civil war in 1642. Yet his importance extends beyond the era in which he worked as a professional playwright. As one among a handful of dramatists whose work was staged regularly by the new playing companies after the theatres reopened in 1660, he is an important figure in the development of new modes of theatre. Despite having had more of his plays produced on the Restoration stage than Shakespeare did, scholarship on his significance to Restoration drama has been remarkably scant. This thesis investigates the significance of Shirley in the Carolean period, tracing the adaptations of Shirley throughout the reign of Charles II. It uses Shirley as a case study to investigate transitions in theatrical practice before 1642 and after 1660, paying attention also to the continuities. This thesis asks why Shirley’s plays were considered suitable by the managers of the Restoration theatre companies who staged them: the King’s Company under Sir Thomas Killigrew, the Duke’s Company under Sir William Davenant, George Jolly’s ‘Nursery’ group, performing at Hatton Garden, and the Red Bull Players, an illegal, pre-Restoration group. It also explores the ways in which Shirley’s plays were adapted in response to the changed social and political climate after 1660, including textual amendments made and the addition of new prologues. It concludes by asking why Shirley’s reputation declined so sharply in the long eighteenth century while Shakespeare’s came to pre-eminence, by comparing the Restoration treatment of his plays with those of Shakespeare.
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Harrington, Brooksie Eugene. "Shirley Caesar : a woman of words." The Ohio State University, 1992. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1231505687.

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Harrington, Brooksie. "Shirley Caesar : a woman of words /." Connect to resource, 1992. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1231505687.

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Jain, Rogulski Mira. "Shirley Jackson ou l'écriture de l'inhabitable." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018SORUL184.

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Cette étude analyse les modalités de l’inhabitable dans un monde hostile et instable, ainsi que les stratégies élaborées afin de contrecarrer les effets pervers de l’instabilité. La violence des affects en jeu est à l’image de la cruauté des relations sociales, et ne laisse que peu d’espace viable même au sein du cercle familial, lui aussi soumis à l’entropie de la méchanceté ontologique. Les héroïnes de Jackson, confrontées de diverses manières aux résurgences d’expériences traumatiques que la traversée du présent, odyssée physique et psychique, transforme en obstacles insurmontables, recherchent la demeure idéale où se réfugier et trouver l’ancrage que leur interdit le monde extérieur. Jackson utilise les tropes de la maison gothique, de la hantise et du surnaturel pour illustrer les rouages trompeurs qui se mettent en place dès lors que ses héroïnes pensent avoir trouvé un tel lieu. Le paradoxe du corps maternel, qui fait cohabiter la vie et la mort, sous leurs formes pulsionnelles les plus destructrices, est le principe fondateur de l’effondrement des personnages. La folie apparaît comme un des moyens de comprendre l’incompréhensible, et de contenir la fragmentation. Enfin, l’invention du nom constitue le dernier retranchement où construire une demeure intérieure
Our study examines the modalities of the uninhabitable in the work of Jackson, where the characters are imprisoned in a world intrinsically hostile, as well as the strategies they use to thwart the instability it entails. The violence of the feelings at stake mirrors the cruelty of social relationships, leaving but little livable space even within the family circle, also affected by the entropy of ontological evil. Jackson’s heroines, variously confronted to the reemergence of past traumatic experiences that their odyssey through the present time transforms into unsurmountable obstacles, seek the ideal house, the haven that will anchor them into a world that rejects them. Jackson uses the tropes of the gothic haunted house as maternal space to illustrate the deadly deception such a place embodies. The cohabitation the most drastic forms of the death drive and vital impulses is the foundation principle of mental dissolution. Madness is one of the means to both embrace and understand the incomprehensible. We conclude by showing how the invention of one’s name is a way of elaborating an inner house
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Noack, Jennifer. "Shirley Jackson--escaping the patriarchy through insanity /." View online, 1994. http://repository.eiu.edu/theses/docs/32211998858857.pdf.

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Twidale, Kathleen M. "The golden thread : the search for love and truth in Shirley Hazzard's writings /." Title page, contents and summary only, 1988. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09ARM/09armt972.pdf.

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Hall, Karen Jeanne. "The Lesbian Politics of Transgressions: Reading Shirley Jackson." The Ohio State University, 1991. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1391684225.

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Williams, Justine Isabella. "The Irish plays of James Shirley, 1636-1640." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2010. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/3933/.

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Although he was a prominent and influential playwright during his theatrical career, the work of James Shirley (1596-1666) has been neglected since Dryden's description of him in 'MacFlecknoe' as a mere 'type...of tautology'. Shirley holds a unique place amongst Caroline dramatists as, at the height of his career, he left London to become resident playwright of the first purpose-built theatre in Ireland, the Werburgh Street Theatre. This seminal event has received fairly little attention from scholars, and the plays of this Irish period (The Royal Master, The Doubtful Heir, The Gentleman of Venice, The Politician and St. Patrick for Ireland) have not previously been examined as a whole. This thesis examines Shirley's Irish period in its entirety, from the circumstances surrounding his move to Dublin in 1636, through an exploration of his relationship with the Werburgh Street Theatre and what influenced his Irish plays, to the factors which resulted in his return to England in 1640. The thesis historicises the production of these plays in their socio-political context. The chapters (chronologically arranged by play) provide close textual studies and contextual material relating the texts to their patrons, performance spaces, audiences, print history and Irish politics. This research reveals that during this four year period, Shirley gradually adapted his writing style in a targeted attempt to appeal to the tastes of the Dublin audience. Shirley managed the theatre with John Ogilby, who was appointed Master of the Revels in Ireland by Lord Deputy Wentworth. An analysis of the relationship between these three key figures has contributed to a comprehensive picture of the socio-political conditions of Shirley‘s writing. Through the investigation of Shirley's work and professional position during this time, this thesis builds on recent critical recovery work (including that by Hadfield/Maley, Rankin, Dutton) on the literary-political circumstances of Stuart Ireland.
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Drack, Sibylle Maria. "Discourse, power and gender in Charlotte Brontë's "Shirley" /." Bern : Selbstverl, 2000. http://www.ub.unibe.ch/content/bibliotheken_sammlungen/sondersammlungen/dissen_bestellformular/index_ger.html.

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Books on the topic "Shirley"

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Bronte, Charlotte. Shirley. Detroit: Kennebec Large Print, 2010.

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EZRA, Mazal. Shirley. Independently Published, 2021.

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Rosengarten, Herbert, Margaret Smith, and Janet Gezari. Shirley. Oxford University Press, 2010.

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Gregory, Lauren. Shirley. Independently Published, 2018.

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Brontë, Charlotte. Shirley. Edited by Herbert Rosengarten, Margaret Smith, and Janet Gezari. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199540808.001.0001.

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‘You expected bread, and you have got a stone; break your teeth on it, and don’t shriek…you will have learned the great lesson how to endure without a sob.’ Shirley is Charlotte Brontë’s only historical novel and her most topical one. Written at a time of social unrest, it is set during the period of the Napoleonic Wars, when economic hardship led to riots in the woollen district of Yorkshire. A mill-owner, Robert Moore, is determined to introduce new machinery despite fierce opposition from his workers; he ignores their suffering, and puts his own life at risk. Robert sees marriage to the wealthy Shirley Keeldar as the solution to his difficulties, but he loves his cousin Caroline. She suffers misery and frustration, and Shirley has her own ideas about the man she will choose to marry. The friendship between the two women, and the contrast between their situations, is at the heart of this compelling novel, which is suffused with Brontë’s deep yearning for an earlier time.
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Shirley. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2016.

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Shirley. Independently Published, 2019.

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Shirley. Independently Published, 2021.

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Shirley. Independently Published, 2021.

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Charlotte, Brontë. Shirley. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2016.

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Book chapters on the topic "Shirley"

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Duthie, Enid L. "Shirley." In The Brontës and Nature, 157–74. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-18373-9_8.

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Nestor, Pauline. "Shirley." In Charlotte Brontë, 68–82. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-18612-9_5.

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Eagleton, Terry. "Shirley." In Myths of Power, 45–60. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230509726_4.

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Winnifrith, Tom. "Shirley." In A New Life of Charlotte Brontë, 86–94. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19215-1_9.

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Eagleton, Terry. "Shirley." In Myths of Power, 45–60. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19629-6_4.

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Tait, Ruth. "Steve Shirley." In Roads to the Top, 235–51. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-13669-8_15.

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Larson, Ann Elisabeth. "Shirley Steinberg." In A Critical Pedagogy of Resistance, 117–20. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6209-374-4_30.

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Kelleter, Frank. "Jackson, Shirley." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL), 1. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_5541-1.

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Newnham, Danielle. "Dame Stephanie Shirley." In Female Innovators at Work, 99–107. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4842-2364-2_10.

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Drews, Jörg, and Gesa Stedman. "Brontë, Charlotte: Shirley." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL), 1–2. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_8077-1.

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Conference papers on the topic "Shirley"

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Rahgozar, Ashkan. "Shirley Bassey "if you go away" rebeat remix." In SIGGRAPH '15: Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques Conference. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2745234.2746783.

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Seng, Foong Soon. "Narrating Women’s Madness In Shirley Jackson’s The Bird’s Nest: An Ecofeminist Analysis." In INCoH 2017 - The Second International Conference on Humanities. Cognitive-Crcs, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2019.09.68.

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Donaduzzi, Carlos Alberto. "A montagem na pintura de Edward Hopper e na imagem cinematográfica: uma análise a partir do filme Shirley: Visions of reality, de Gustav Deutsch." In Encontro de História da Arte. Universidade Estadual de Campinas, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.20396/eha.12.2017.4486.

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O presente artigo busca discutir a intimidade das pinturas do artista norte-americano Edward Hopper (1882 – 1967) com a imagem cinematográfica, sobretudo implicações relativas ao conceito de montagem, não somente enquanto elemento do cinema, mas também da pintura. Com isso, busca-se apontar diálogos entre as obras de Hopper com o cinema a partir da análise do filme Shirley: Visions of reality (2013) de Gustav Deutsch, um longa-metragem experimental que conecta treze telas de Hopper em uma narrativa ficcional.
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NICA, Iuliana Amalia. "Current approaches to formative assessment – theoretical remarks." In Ştiință și educație: noi abordări și perspective. "Ion Creanga" State Pedagogical University, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.46727/c.v2.24-25-03-2023.p325-329.

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Formative assessment is an ever-evolving process. Since the first mentions of this notion, in 1976, M. Scriven identifies this form of evaluation by associating it with a „continuous and malleable” process. By researching several definitions given by authors over time, some conclusions presented in this article are highlighted. It is certain that formative assessment helps both the student and the teacher in learning. In the author Shirley Clarke we also find a series of ten principles that characterize this form of evaluation. Considering that formative assessment is a powerful tool that education has in preparing students, the article defines the theoretical benchmarks that must guide the teaching staff in the teaching-learning-assessment process.
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Kim, Ji-Eun. "“Fraternal and Sisterly Love”: Observing Disintegration and Resilience in the Tenant of Wildfell Hall and Shirley." In The European Conference on Arts & Humanities 2021. The International Academic Forum(IAFOR), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22492/issn.2188-1111.2021.10.

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PATRICK, HUGH. "COMMENTS ON SHIRLEY W. Y. KUO'S “KEY FACTORS FOR HIGH GROWTH WITH EQUITY — THE TAIWAN EXPERIENCE, 1952–1990”." In Proceedings of the Economic Development of ROC and the Pacific Rim in the 1990s and Beyond. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789814440998_0002.

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Semeneca, Jelena. "SHIRLEY JACKSON�S �THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE� AS A HORROR NOVEL: THE UNCANNY, THE MONSTROUS, THE SUDDEN." In 6th SWS International Scientific Conference on Arts and Humanities ISCAH 2019. STEF92 Technology, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sws.iscah.2019.1/s27.071.

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Covington, James Howard. "PALEO-TOPOGRAPHY IN THE CRETACEOUS/TERTIARY ANGULAR UNCONFORMITY AND ITS INFLUENCE ON URANIUM MINERALIZATION IN SHIRLEY BASIN, WYOMING." In GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017. Geological Society of America, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2017am-301322.

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Ferretti, Stefano, and Gabriele D'Angelo. "Smart shires: The revenge of countrysides." In 2016 IEEE Symposium on Computers and Communication (ISCC). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iscc.2016.7543827.

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Kamalova, M. B., and Z. M. Amanova. "RESEARCH OF THE QUALITY OF BEAUTIES «SHIRMOY-NON»." In Теоретические и практические вопросы химической науки и технологий. Улан-Удэ: Восточно-Сибирский государственный университет технологий и управления, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.53980/9785907599543_91.

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Reports on the topic "Shirley"

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Misra, Brij. GRl-95-0466 Inert Base Gas Field Experiment. Chantilly, Virginia: Pipeline Research Council International, Inc. (PRCI), September 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.55274/r0011238.

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IGTs research efforts in the laboratory and over a decade of field experience of inert gas (nitrogen) application in French underground gas storage fields clearly indicate that replacement of base gas with less-expensive natural gas is feasible. The information from lab tests and a systematic procedure developed earlier were used to apply inert gas in the U.S. storage fields. This procedure for inert gas application was first applied in the Simpson Chapel field operated by the Citizens Gas and Coke Utility Company. This report summarizes the efforts of the second field test in the Shirley gas storage field, which belongs to Equitrans. In the Shirley gas storage field, a target area was selected and evaluated by completing four wells, conducting reservoir and tracer testing to determine its suitability for inert gas injection. Reservoir modeling was indicated that in the best option, with the help of existing wells in the target area, 300 MMCF or 5% of the total base gas can be replaced with nitrogen without jeopardizing the pipeline quality of working gas. In this process, a total of 400 MMCF of natural gas would be recovered from the target area. In addition to a one-time cost benefit (due to the price differential between natural gas and nitrogen), inert gas injection would also cut down an equivalent amount of natural gas migration and provide another opportunity to replace 200 MMCF of base gas with nitrogen in the next 20 years. FERC approval to conduct inert gas injection in the Shirley field has been obtained by Equitrans. Inert gas injection in the target area is expected to start in the summer of 1999, following the ongoing gas withdrawal from the target area to create a pressure sink.
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Frazier, William, and Jeffrey Price. Data Validation Package, July 2016 Groundwater Sampling at the Shirley Basin South, Wyoming, Disposal Site November 2016. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), November 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1348892.

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Ellis, Harrison, and Weiss. GRl-96-0407 Guidelines for Implementation and Risk Assessment of Inert Base Gas Projects. Chantilly, Virginia: Pipeline Research Council International, Inc. (PRCI), April 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.55274/r0010923.

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GRI funded two prograrns to develop a field implementation plan for inert base gas projects and one to develop risk assessment procedures for the project outlined by that plan-that were combined into a guidelines document. The field implementation plan describes a strategy for identification of the proper storage site and for placement of the optimum volume of inert gas into the selected field. The four basic steps discussed in the field implementation plan are site selection, data collection, engineering analysis, and final implementation planning. Considerable attention is given to the detailed risk assessment, because risk assessment techniques may be new to those involved with underground storage projects. The detailed risk assessment includes cost/benefit analyses and examining insurance needs. A case study of field implementation plan and risk assessment methods applied to the Shirley gas storage field in West Virginia is also presented. PRCI cofunded this research.
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4

González Julio, Luz Karinne. El final tranquilo de la vida: teoría y narrativa. Ediciones Universidad Cooperativa de Colombia, March 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.16925/gcnc.53.

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Dentro del conocimiento enfermero orientado al cuidado básico de pacientes, se encuentra la teoría del final tranquilo de la vida propuesta por Cornelia Rulad y Shirley Moore. Esta nota de clase se compone de tres unidades: la primera aborda los conceptos generales del conocimiento enfermero y la estructura holárquica del pensamiento enfermero; la segunda presenta la teoría del final tranquilo de la vida con sus principales componentes y se explican las visiones y patrones que pueden estar inmersos en la teoría; por último, la tercera contempla una narrativa de enfermería que permitirá identificar los conceptos vistos en las dos unidades anteriores. Cada unidad cuenta con ejercicios para aplicar lo aprendido. El objetivo de esta nota de clase es proporcionarle al estudiante algunas indicaciones sobre cómo identificar la estructura del pensamiento holárquico en situaciones de enfermería, las cuales le sirvan como referente en el desarrollo de competencias en el cuidado de pacientes al final de la vida.
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Rains, Christopher, Martin Delahunty, and Valerie Philippon. Obtaining retrospective Open Access publishing: the Shire experience. Oxford PharmaGenesis Ltd, June 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21305/ismppus2020.001.

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Desai, Shailesh, Valerie Philippon, Anne Rusk, Slavka Baronikova, and Christopher P. Rains. Open Access Publishing at Shire: A Quantitative Assessment. Oxford PharmaGenesis Ltf, June 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21305/ismppus2020.002.

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Chen. L51995 Class Location Criteria for Gas Pipelines. Chantilly, Virginia: Pipeline Research Council International, Inc. (PRCI), December 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.55274/r0010375.

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Current standards and regulations for gas transmission pipelines classify pipeline corridors into location classes and specify design factors accordingly. In the U.S., the current class location system was developed in the 1950's to mitigate increased potential of equipment impact due to frequent excavation activities in developed areas (Shires and Harrison 1998, Michalopoulos and Babka 2000). By using relatively low design factors for populated areas, the increased wall thickness provides extra protection to resist equipment impact with corresponding increase in costs. The primary objectives of this project were to examine the current class location system and develop supplementary criteria that would enhance pipeline safety by applying risk-based or reliability-based methods. This report covers four related topics dealing with 1. assessment area, 2. end boundary between different class locations, 3. enhanced prevention and maintenance for class upgrade, and 4. development of a new safety class system.
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Pavlovic, Noel, Barbara Plampin, Gayle Tonkovich, and David Hamilla. Special flora and vegetation of Indiana Dunes National Park. National Park Service, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.36967/2302417.

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The Indiana Dunes (comprised of 15 geographic units (see Figure 1) which include Indiana Dunes National Park, Dunes State Park, and adjacent Shirley Heinze Land Trust properties) are remarkable in the Midwest and Great Lakes region for the vascular plant diversity, with an astounding 1,212 native plant species in an area of approximately 16,000 acres! This high plant diversity is the result of the interactions among postglacial migrations, the variety of soil substrates, moisture conditions, topography, successional gradients, ?re regimes, proximity to Lake Michigan, and light levels. This richness is all the more signi?cant given the past human alterations of the landscape resulting from logging; conversion to agriculture; construction of transportation corridors, industrial sites, and residential communities; ?re suppression; land abandonment; and exotic species invasions. Despite these impacts, multiple natural areas supporting native vegetation persist. Thus, each of the 15 units of the Indiana Dunes presents up to eight subunits varying in human disturbance and consequently in ?oristic richness. Of the most signi?cant units of the park in terms of number of native species, Cowles Dunes and the Dunes State Park stand out from all the other units, with 786 and 686 native species, respectively. The next highest ranked units for numbers of native species include Keiser (630), Furnessville (574), Miller Woods (551), and Hoosier Prairie (542). The unit with lowest plant richness is Heron Rookery (220), with increasing richness in progression from Calumet Prairie (320), Hobart Prairie Grove (368), to Pinhook Bog (380). Signi?cant natural areas, retaining native vegetation composition and structure, include Cowles Bog (Cowles Dunes Unit), Howes Prairie (Cowles Dunes), Dunes Nature Preserve (Dunes State Park), Dunes Prairie Nature Preserve (Dunes State Park), Pinhook Bog, Furnessville Woods (Furnessville), Miller Woods, Inland Marsh, and Mnoke Prairie (Bailly). Wilhelm (1990) recorded a total of 1,131 native plant species for the ?ora of the Indiana Dunes. This was similar to the 1,132 species recorded by the National Park Service (2014) for the Indiana Dunes. Based on the nomenclature of Swink and Wilhelm (1994), Indiana Dunes National Park has 1,206 native plant species. If we include native varieties and hybrids, the total increases to 1,244 taxa. Based on the nomenclature used for this report?the Flora of North America (FNA 2022), and the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS 2022)?Indiana Dunes National Park houses 1,206 native vascular plant species. As of this writing (2020), the Indiana Dunes is home to 37% of the species of conservation concern in Indiana (241 out of 624 Indiana-listed species): state extirpated = 10 species, state endangered = 75, and state threatened = 100. Thus, 4% of the state-listed species in the Indiana Dunes are extirpated, 31% endangered, and 41% threatened. Watch list and rare categories have been eliminated. Twenty-nine species once documented from the Indiana Dunes may be extirpated because they have not been seen since 2001. Eleven have not been seen since 1930 and 15 since 1978. If we exclude these species, then there would be a total of 1,183 species native to the Indiana Dunes. Many of these are cryptic in their life history or diminutive, and thus are di?cult to ?nd. Looking at the growth form of native plants, <1% (nine species) are clubmosses, 3% (37) are ferns, 8% (297) are grasses and sedges, 56% (682) are forbs or herbs, 1% (16) are herbaceous vines, <1% (7) are subshrubs (woody plants of herbaceous stature), 5% (60) are shrubs, 1% (11) are lianas (woody vines), and 8% (93) are trees. Of the 332 exotic species (species introduced from outside North America), 65% (219 species) are forbs such as garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata), 15% (50 species) are graminoids such as phragmites (Phragmites australis ssp. australis), 2% (seven species) are vines such as ?eld bindweed (Convulvulus arvensis), <1% (two species) are subshrubs such as Japanese pachysandra (Pachysandra terminalis), 8% (28 species) are shrubs such as Asian bush honeysuckle (Lonicera spp.), 1% (three species) are lianas such as oriental bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus), and 8% (23 species) are trees such as tree of heaven (Ailanthus altissimus). Of the 85 adventive species, native species that have invaded from elsewhere in North America, 14% (11 species) are graminoids such as broom sedge (Andropogon virginicus), 57% (48 species) are forbs such as fall phlox (Phlox paniculata), 5% (six species) are shrubs such as Carolina allspice (Calycanthus floridus), 3% (two species) are subshrubs such as holly leaved barberry (Berberis repens), 1% (one species) is a liana (trumpet creeper (Campsis radicans), 3% two species) are herbaceous vines such as tall morning glory (Ipomoea purpurea), and 17% (15 species) are trees such as American holly (Ilex opaca). A total of 436 species were found to be ?special? based on political rankings (federal and state-listed threatened and endangered species), species with charismatic ?owers, and those that are locally rare.
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Keshav, Dr Geetha, Dr Suwaibah Fatima Samer, Dr Salman Haroon, and Dr Mohammed Abrar Hassan. TO STUDY THE CORRELATION OF BMI WITH ABO BLOOD GROUP AND CARDIOVASCULAR RISK AMONG MEDICAL STUDENTS. World Wide Journals, February 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.36106/ijar/2405523.

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Introduction: Advancements and increase in access to healthcare have increased the life expectancy in India from 32 years in 1947 to almost 70 years currently. Due to robust vaccination and basic health programs, most of the communicable diseases are kept under control. The disease burden is now skewed towards non-communicable diseases. It is an established fact that body mass index (BMI) is a reliable predictor of cardiovascular disease (CVD) later in life. Early prediction can decrease the disease load and enable early preventative measures. A more novel approach of connecting it with blood groups would yield profound results in predictability and subsequent management. This study was done to see correlation between BMI and known blood groups in order to predict the potential incidence of CVDs in medical students. Material and Method - A cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted in Bhaskar Medical College from September 2022 - November 2022. The sample population included 150- 1st year medical students chosen by Randomized sampling method. BMI was calculated based as weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters (kg/m2). Discussion - Many studies conducted on the association of Blood groups with BMI yielded mixed and inconclusive results. On analysis of the data obtained from this study, O- positive blood group showed the highest inclination towards obesity i.e. 30 of the total participants. A-positive and B- positive blood groups were shown to have a lesser association with obesity i.e. 11 participants of the 150. These results were in accordance with a study done among female students by Shireen Javad et.al, nding blood group O to be the most prone to obesity.8 Incompatible to our results, a study conducted by Samuel Smith Isaac Okai et.al. found no signicant association between blood groups and BMI.10 Another study conducted by Christina Ravillo et.al. found that blood group O had the highest and blood group AB with lowest prevalence of obesity9. These ndings were similar to the results obtained in our study. To study the correlation of BMI with ABO blood group and Cardiovascula AIMS and OBJECTIVES Aim: - r risk among medical students. 1. Calculate and segregate the participants according to BM Objectives: - I using the standard formula provided by the WHO. 1. Determine Blood group using antisera 2. Evaluation of Lipid prole in obese individuals
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Cunningham, Stuart, Marion McCutcheon, Greg Hearn, Mark Ryan, and Christy Collis. Australian Cultural and Creative Activity: A Population and Hotspot Analysis: Sunshine Coast. Queensland University of Technology, December 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/rep.eprints.136822.

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The Sunshine Coast (unless otherwise specified, Sunshine Coast refers to the region which includes both Sunshine Coast and Noosa council areas) is a classic regional hotspot. In many respects, the Sunshine Coast has assets that make it the “Goldilocks” of Queensland hotspots: “the agility of the region and our collaborative nature is facilitated by the fact that we're not too big, not too small - 330,000 people” (Paddenburg, 2019); “We are in that perfect little bubble of just right of about everything” (Erbacher 2019). The Sunshine Coast has one of the fastest-growing economies in Australia. Its population is booming and its local governments are working together to establish world-class communications, transport and health infrastructure, while maintaining the integrity of the region’s much-lauded environment and lifestyle. As a result, the Sunshine Coast Council is regarded as a pioneer on smart city initiatives, while Noosa Shire Council has built a reputation for prioritising sustainable development. The region’s creative economy is growing at a faster rate that of the rest of the economy—in terms of job growth, earnings, incomes and business registrations. These gains, however, are not spread uniformly. Creative Services (that is, the advertising and marketing, architecture and design, and software and digital content sectors) are flourishing, while Cultural Production (music and performing arts, publishing and visual arts) is variable, with visual and performing arts growing while film, television and radio and publishing have low or no growth. The spirit of entrepreneurialism amongst many creatives in the Sunshine Coast was similar to what we witnessed in other hotspots: a spirit of not necessarily relying on institutions, seeking out alternative income sources, and leveraging networks. How public agencies can better harness that energy and entrepreneurialism could be a focus for ongoing strategy. There does seem to be a lower level of arts and culture funding going into the Sunshine Coast from governments than its population base and cultural and creative energy might suggest. Federal and state arts funding programs are under-delivering to the Sunshine Coast.
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