Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Authors Club (New York, N.Y.) »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Authors Club (New York, N.Y.)"

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Wills, Jeanie, et Krystl Raven. « The founding five : transformational leadership in the New York League of Advertising Women’s club, 1912–1926 ». Journal of Historical Research in Marketing 12, no 3 (20 mai 2020) : 377–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jhrm-04-2019-0015.

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Purpose This paper uses archival documents to begin to recover a history of women’s leadership in the advertising industry. In particular, this paper aims to identify the leadership styles of the first five presidents of the New York League of Advertising Women’s (NYLAW) club. Their leadership from 1912 to 1926 set the course for and influenced the culture of the New York League. These five women laid the foundations of a social club that would also contribute to the professionalization of women in advertising, building industry networks for women, forging leadership and mentorship links among women, providing advertising education exclusively for women and, finally, bolstering women’s status in all avenues of advertising. The first five presidents were, of course, different characters, but each exhibited the traits associated with “transformational leaders,” leaders who prepare the “demos” for their own leadership roles. The women’s styles converged with their situational context to give birth to a women’s advertising club that, like most clubs, did charity work and hosted social events, but which was developed by the first five presidents to give women the same kinds of professional opportunities as the advertising men’s clubs provided their membership. The first five presidents of the Advertising League had strong prior professional credibility because of the careers they had constructed for themselves among the men who dominated the advertising field in the first decade of the 20th century. As presidents of the NYLAW, they advocated for better jobs, equal rights at work and better pay for women working in the advertising industry. Design/methodology/approach This paper draws on women’s advertising archival material from the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe and Wisconsin Historical Society to argue that the five founding mothers of the NYLAW provided what can best be described as transformational feminist leadership, which resulted in building an effective club for their members and setting it on a trajectory of advocacy and education that would benefit women in the advertising industry for the next several decades. These women did not refer to themselves as “leaders,” they probably would not have considered their work in organizing the New York club an exercise in leadership, nor might they have called themselves feminists or seen their club as a haven for feminist work. However, by using modern leadership theories, the study can gain insight into how these women instantiated feminist ideals through a transformational leadership paradigm. Thus, the historical documents provide insight into the leadership roles and styles of some of the first women working in American advertising in the early parts of the 20th century. Findings Archival documents from the women’s advertising clubs can help us to understand women’s leadership practices and to reconstruct a history of women’s leadership in the advertising industry. Eight years before women in America could vote, the first five presidents shared with the club their wealth of collective experience – over two decades worth – as advertising managers, copywriters and space buyers. The first league presidents oversaw the growth of an organization would benefit both women and the advertising industry when they proclaimed that the women’s clubs would “improve the level of taste, ethics and knowledge throughout the communications industry by example, education and dissemination of information” (Dignam, 1952, p. 9). In addition, the club structure gave ad-women a collective voice which emerged through its members’ participation in building the club and through the rallying efforts of transformational leaders. Social implications Historically, the advertising industry in the USA has been “pioneered” by male industry leaders such as Claude Hopkins, Albert Lasker and David Ogilvy. However, when the authors look to archival documents, it was found that women have played leadership roles in the industry too. Drawing on historical methodology, this study reconstructs a history of women’s leadership in the advertising and marketing industries. Originality/value This paper helps to understand how women participated in leadership roles in the advertising industry, which, in turn, enabled other women to build careers in the industry.
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Ting, D., B. Bailey, F. Scheuermeyer, T. Chan et D. Harris. « P018 : Journal club functions as a community of practice that safeguards quality assurance in the era of free open access medical education : a qualitative study ». CJEM 22, S1 (mai 2020) : S70—S71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cem.2020.226.

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Introduction: The ways in which Emergency Medicine (EM) physicians interact with the medical literature has been transformed with the rise of Free Open Access Medical Education (FOAM). Although nearly all residents use FOAM resources, some criticize the lack of universal quality assurance. This problem is a particular risk for trainees who have many time constraints and incompletely developed critical appraisal skills. One potential safeguard is journal club, which is used by virtually all EM residency programs in North America to review new literature. However, EM resident perspectives have not been studied. Our research objective was to describe how residents perceive journal club to influence how they translate the medical literature into their clinical practice. Our research question was whether FOAM has influenced residents’ goals and perceived value of journal club. Methods: We developed a semi-structured interview script in conjunction with a methods expert and refined it via pilot testing. Following constructivist grounded theory, and using both purposive and theoretical sampling, we conducted a focus group (n = 7) and 18 individual interviews with EM residents at the 4 training sites of the University of British Columbia. In total, we analyzed 920 minutes of recorded audio. Two authors independently coded each transcript, with discrepancies reconciled by discussion and consensus. Constant comparative analysis was performed. We conducted return of findings through public presentations. Results: We found evidence that journal club works as a community of practice with a progression of roles from junior to senior residents. Participants described journal club as a safe venue to compare practice patterns and to gain insight into the practical wisdom of their peers and mentors. The social and academic activities present at journal club interacted positively to foster this environment. In asking residents about ways that journal club accelerates knowledge translation, we actually found that residents cite journal club as a quality check to prevent premature adoption of new research findings. Residents are hesitant to adopt new literature into their practice without positive validation, which can occur during journal club. Conclusion: Journal club functions as a community of practice that is valued by residents. Journal club is a primary way that new evidence can be validated before being put into practice, and may act as quality assurance in the era of FOAM.
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Peterson, C. S. « Sierra Club : 100 Years of Protecting Nature. By Tom Turner. New York : Harry N. Abrams, Inc. in association with the Sierra Club, 1991. 288 pp. Illustrations, notes, chronology, bibliography, index. $49.50 ». Forest & ; Conservation History 37, no 1 (1 janvier 1993) : 39–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3983822.

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Darda, Joseph. « The Great American Baseball Novel : How Literature Invented the National Pastime ». American Literary History 34, no 4 (18 novembre 2022) : 1335–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajac156.

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Abstract From 1846, when the Knickerbocker Base Ball Club lost their first game under a consolidated set of rules, transforming the “New York game” into “base ball,” and Walt Whitman, then a roving editor with the Brooklyn Eagle, observed neighborhood kids engaged in “a certain game of ball,” to the rise of television and football, literature elevated baseball from another bat-and-ball game to a national institution, a distorted mirror through which the nation identified itself. MLB commissioners and novelists have described baseball as a form of writing and as the literature of their childhoods because the game first achieved national status through writing and literature. From Whitman to Bernard Malamud, American authors turned to baseball to determine the health of the nation, encouraging their readers to invest in the health of the game. First came the great American baseball novel, then the national pastime.Baseball nationalism needed the hard sell of sportswriters and the soft touch of literature.
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Cohen, Nevin, Katherine Tomaino Fraser, Chloe Arnow, Michelle Mulcahy et Christophe Hille. « Online Grocery Shopping by NYC Public Housing Residents Using Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Benefits : A Service Ecosystems Perspective ». Sustainability 12, no 11 (9 juin 2020) : 4694. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12114694.

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This paper examines adoption of online grocery shopping, and potential cost and time savings compared to brick and mortar food retailers, by New York City public housing residents using Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. A mixed methods action research project involving the co-creation of an online shopping club, the Farragut Food Club (FFC), recruited 300 members who registered to shop online using SNAP, and received waivers on delivery minimums and provided technical assistance and centralized food delivery. We conducted a survey (n = 206) and focus groups to understand shopping practices; FFC members collected receipts of groceries over two weeks before and after the pilot to measure foods purchased, stores patronized, and prices. We interviewed FFC members to elicit experiences with the pilot, and estimated cost differences between products purchased in brick and mortar stores and equivalent products online, and transportation time and cost differences. Online shopping represented a small (2.4%) percentage of grocery spending. Unit prices for products purchased on Amazon ($0.28) were significantly higher than for equivalent products purchased in brick and mortar stores ($0.23) (p < 0.001.) Compatibility with existing routines, low relative advantage, and cost of online products limited the adoption of online shopping among SNAP users.
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John, Steven A., Jeffrey T. Parsons, H. Jonathon Rendina et Christian Grov. « Club drug users had higher odds of reporting a bacterial STI compared with non-club drug users : results from a cross-sectional analysis of gay and bisexual men on HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis ». Sexually Transmitted Infections 95, no 8 (20 août 2018) : 626–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-2018-053591.

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ObjectivesPre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) can reduce HIV transmission risk for many gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men. However, bacterial STI (BSTI) associated with decreasing condom use among HIV PrEP users is a growing concern. Determining the characteristics of current PrEP users at highest BSTI risk fills a critical gap in the literature.MethodsGay and bisexual men (GBM) in New York City on HIV PrEP for 6 or more months (n=65) were asked about chlamydia, gonorrhoea and syphilis diagnoses in the past 6 months. By design, half (51%) of the sample were club drug users. We examined the associations of length of time on PrEP, type of PrEP care provider, PrEP adherence, number of sexual partners, number of condomless anal sex acts and club drug use on self-reported BSTI using multivariable, binary logistic regressions, adjusting for age, race/ethnicity, education and income.ResultsTwenty-six per cent of GBM on HIV PrEP reported a diagnosis of BSTI in the past 6 months. Men who reported club drug use (adjusted OR (AOR)=6.60, p<0.05) and more frequent condomless anal sex in the past 30 days (AOR=1.13, p<0.05) had higher odds of reporting a BSTI. No other variables were significantly associated with self-reported BSTI in the multivariable models.ConclusionsClub drug users could be at a unique BSTI risk, perhaps because of higher risk sexual networks. Findings should be considered preliminary, but suggest the importance of ongoing BSTI screening and risk-reduction counselling for GBM on HIV PrEP.
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Nicholson, Bob. « ‘You Kick the Bucket ; We Do the Rest!’ : Jokes and the Culture of Reprinting in the Transatlantic Press1 ». Journal of Victorian Culture 17, no 3 (1 septembre 2012) : 273–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2012.702664.

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Abstract In December 1893 the Conservative candidate for Flintshire addressed an audience at Mold Constitutional Club. After he had finished attacking Gladstone and the local Liberal incumbent, he ended his speech with a joke. He advised the Conservative party to adopt, with regard to the government, the sign of an American undertaker: ‘You kick the bucket; we do the rest’. How did a sign belonging to a Nevadan undertaker become the subject of a joke told at a political meeting in North Wales? This unlikely question forms the basis of this article. Using new digital archives, it tracks the journey of the gag from its origins in New York, its travels around America, its trip across the Atlantic, its circulation throughout Britain and its eventual leap into political discourse. The article uses the joke to illuminate the workings of a broader culture of transatlantic reprinting. During the final quarter of the nineteenth century miscellaneous ‘snippets’ cut from the pages of the American press became a staple feature of Britain's bestselling newspapers and magazines. This article explores how these texts were imported, circulated and continually rewritten in dynamic partnership between authors, editors and their readers.
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Besteman, Nathan, et John Ferdinands. « Another Way to Divide a Line Segment into n Equal Parts ». Mathematics Teacher 98, no 6 (février 2005) : 428–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/mt.98.6.0428.

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In summer 1995, two high school students, David Goldenheim and Dan Litchfield, discovered a way to divide a line segment into any number of equal parts. Their method differed from the standard method of Euclid. Together with their teacher Charles Dietrich, they wrote an article on their method, which appeared in the January 1997 issue of the Mathematics Teacher (Litchfield, Goldenheim, and Dietrich 1997). The discovery received considerable publicity in the popular media and was written up in the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. The authors gave talks at several professional conferences and were invited to meet the secretary of education.
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Meunier, Étienne, et Karolynn Siegel. « Sex club/party attendance and STI among men who have sex with men : results from an online survey in New York City ». Sexually Transmitted Infections 95, no 8 (13 mars 2019) : 584–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-2018-053816.

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ObjectivePrior studies have shown that men who have sex with men (MSM) who attend sex clubs or parties are at higher risk for HIV and other STIs than those who do not. We sought to provide data about MSM who attend sex clubs/parties in New York City (NYC) in the era of biomedical HIV prevention.Methods: We conducted an online survey among MSM in NYC (n=766) in 2016–2017 and investigated differences between those who reported never attending a sex club/party (non-attendees 50.1%), those who had attended over a year ago (past attendees 18.0%) and those who attended in the prior year (recent attendees 30.1%). We also conducted multivariable analyses to explore associations with past-year STI diagnosis.Results: Recent attendees were not more likely to be HIV positive than non-attendees. Among participants never diagnosed with HIV, recent attendees were more likely to use pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP, 32.6%) than non-attendees (14.5%) and past attendees (18.8%; p<0.001). Recent attendees reported the highest numbers of recent sex partners, including partners with whom they had condomless anal sex. Significantly more recent attendees reported an STI diagnosis in the prior year (27.9%) compared with non-attendees (14.0%) and past attendees (16.5%; p<0.001). However, 13.8% of non-attendees and 11.5% of past attendees reported having never tested for STIs, significantly more than recent attendees (6.0%, p=0.010). Multivariable analysis showed recent attendees to have 2.42 times the odds (compared with non-attendees) of reporting past-year STI diagnosis (95% CI 1.52 to 3.87, p<0.001).ConclusionsCompared with those who had not done so, MSM who attended sex clubs/parties in NYC in the prior year were not only more likely to report past-year STI diagnoses but also more likely to report PrEP use or recent HIV/STI testing. Sexual health promotion among MSM who attend sex clubs/parties should address STI risk and prevention.
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Ramaswamy, Chitra, Emily Westheimer et Sarah Braunstein. « Cancer Mortality among Persons with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection in New York City, 2001–2015 ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 4, suppl_1 (2017) : S58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx162.135.

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Abstract Background With the prolonged life-span of persons with HIV (PWH) due to anti-retroviral therapy, their cancer burden has increased. Cancer continues to be a leading cause of death among PWH. Studying cancer mortality can inform and guide the development of cancer screening and prevention strategies for PWH. Methods We analyzed data for all persons &gt; = 13 years who were diagnosed with HIV from 2001 to 2015 and reported to the New York City (NYC) HIV surveillance registry (HSR). Using the HSR and the underlying cause of death obtained from the NYC vital statistics registry and the National Death Index, we examined age-specific and age-standardized mortality rates from cancer and compared time trends of deaths due to HIV-related8 cancer to deaths from non-HIV-related cancers. Results There were 34,190 deaths reported among 154,688 PWH of whom nearly half (n = 16,804; 49.1%) died due to HIV (excluding HIV-related cancers). Among all deaths, HIV was the leading cause, followed by cancer (both HIV and non-HIV-related) (n = 5,271; 15.4%) and cardiovascular disease (n = 3,724, 10.9%). The top three causes of non-HIV-related cancer deaths were lung cancer (n = 1,040; 19.7%), liver cancer (n = 552; 10.5%), and colorectal cancer (n = 315; 5.6%). Although the mortality rate among PWH decreased over time (24.4 to 13.9 per 1,000 person-years from 2001 to 2015), the proportion of deaths attributable to all cancers increased (10.6% in 2001 to 19.9% in 2015, p &lt; .0001). This increase was driven by non-HIV-related cancers (6.1% of all deaths in 2001 to 15.8% in 2015, p &lt; .0001). The mean age increased from 2001 to 2015 among the dead (46 to 56 years) and among the censored (35 to 49 years). After controlling for demographic factors, transmission risk, and last CD4 count, the hazard ratio for cancer deaths was higher among people who inject drugs (HR = 1.5; 95% CI = 1.4–1.7) and those with last CD4 count &lt; 200 (HR = 9.3; 95% CI = 8.3–10.5). Conclusion Although mortality rates are decreasing in PWH, deaths due to non-HIV-related cancers are increasing. The upward trend in the mean age suggests that aging may be contributing to this increase. Routine screening for liver and colon cancers along with smoking cessation may reduce lung, liver and colon cancer deaths. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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Livres sur le sujet "Authors Club (New York, N.Y.)"

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Appel, Allan. Club Revelation : A Novel. Minneapolis, USA : Coffee House Press, 2001.

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The Dante Club. Rockland, MA : Wheeler Pub., 2003.

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Matthew, Pearl. The Dante Club : A Novel. New York : Random House Trade Paperbacks, 2004.

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English Poetry from Wordsworth to Yeats (January 25-March 24, 1995 New York, New York)). The Gerald N. and Glorya D. Wachs collection of 19th-century English poetry : A progress report ; prepared on the occasion of an exhibition at the Grolier Club, in New York City, from January to March, 1995. New York : The Grolier Club, 1995.

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Bronte, Charlotte. Kie u Giang = : Nguye n b?an Jane Eyre. [S.l : s.n., 1989.

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Prose, Francine. Reading Like a Writer. New York : HarperCollins, 2006.

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Prose, Francine. Reading like a writer : A guide for people who love books and for those who want to write them. New York : HarperCollins Publishers, 2006.

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José Martí en el Club Crepúsculo de Nueva York : En busca de nuevos equilibrios. Guadalajara, Jalisco : Editorial Universitaria, Universidad de Guadalajara, 2010.

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Cheever, Susan. Note Found in a Bottle (Wsp Readers Club). Washington Square Press, 2000.

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Behrman, S. N. People in a Magazine : The Selected Letters of S. N. Behrman and His Editors at the New Yorker. University of Massachusetts Press, 2018.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Authors Club (New York, N.Y.)"

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Hudson, Berkley. « World Famous Hunting Dog Trainer Er M. Shelley, circa 1930 ». Dans O. N. Pruitt's Possum Town, 39–46. University of North Carolina Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469662701.003.0004.

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Known worldwide in hunting dog circles, Er Shelley was a trainer extraordinaire. From 1921 until his death in 1957, he lived in Columbus, Mississippi. He specialized in bird dogs—pointers and setters—and trained foxhounds. He achieved acclaim as a hunting dog trainer, field trials handler, and author. He trained famous dogs: the pointer Hard Cash, Count Gladstone, and the English setter, Pioneer, who won the National Bird Dog Championship. In 1906, Shelley won the Westminster Kennel Club cup for “Best Exhibit of Field Trial Setters.” In Africa with internationally known sportsman Paul Rainey, their safari killed twenty-seven lions. Many became “the Rainey group” after their donation to the American Museum of Natural History. Two leopard cubs were donated to the Bronx Zoo. Based on these experiences, Shelley self-published Hunting Big Game with Dogs in Africa. In 1921, Putnam & Sons published what hunting aficionados consider a classic, Bird Dog Training Today and Tomorrow. For books, magazines, and newspapers, Pruitt photographed Shelley and his dogs. Shelley oversaw hunting trips for the president of Standard Oil of New York, Herbert Pratt, who had a plantation in Ridgeland, South Carolina. Besides training dogs, Shelley pioneered in dog food manufacturing—with “Very Best Dog Food,” distributed nationally.
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Hardy, Thomas. « [List of Publications for the Authors Club of New York] ». Dans Thomas Hardy's Public Voice : The Essays, Speeches, and Miscellaneous Prose, sous la direction de Michael Millgate. Oxford University Press, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00226922.

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Melville, Herman. « To the Founders of the Authors Club [October?] 1882 · New York ». Dans The Writings of Herman Melville : The Northwestern-Newberry Edition, Vol. 14 : Correspondence, sous la direction de Lynn Horth, 480. Northwestern University Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00217797.

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« From the Founders of the Authors Club [October?] 1882 · New York ». Dans The Writings of Herman Melville : The Northwestern-Newberry Edition, Vol. 14 : Correspondence, sous la direction de Lynn Horth. Northwestern University Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00218248.

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Burns, Jennifer. « Individualists of the World, Unite ! » Dans Goddess of The Market, 39–66. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195324877.003.0003.

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Abstract Once she spotted the first pink, Rand began to see them every-where. They had even infiltrated the movie studios, she soon discovered. Despite her success as a novelist and playwright, Rand could find no work in the lucrative film industry, a failure she blamed on her outspoken opposition to Soviet Russia. She turned instead to the novel that would become The Fountainhead. Politics soon emerged as a welcome distraction. As Roosevelt launched his historic program of government reforms Rand watched closely. She read the New York newspapers regularly and began dipping into the work of authors critical of the president. By 1940 her interest in politics had become all-consuming. Fired to action by the presidential campaign of Wendell Willkie she stopped work on her novel and began volunteering full time for the New York City Willkie Club.
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Trakhtenberg, Lev. « The Fictitious Writer F.V. Larrovitch ». Dans Hoax in Slavic Cultures : Poetics and Practices, 203–13. Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/7576-0480-0.12.

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The paper presents the history of a literary hoax orchestrated by R. Wright and W. G. Jordan, members of the Authors Club in New York, in 1917-1918. They invented a Russian writer named F.V. Larrovitch, who never existed. They arranged “the author's” jubilee and published the book about him. The latter consisted of articles about his life and works, fragments of his novels and poems, bibliographical list of his works as well as the one of the critical studies on him, and even illustrations including his portrait and a photocopy of his manuscript. The book sparked a discussion in American periodicals; the hoax was suspected, but there were also papers reaffirming the existence of Larrovitch, which were contrived by the hoaxers. However, the hoax was exposed soon, as it might have been planned from the very beginning. The Larrovitch story deserves attention of literary historians as an example of stereotypes about Russia that were common in the 1910s America. The persona of Larrovitch was made of such stereotypes. At the same time the hoax owed its success to the keen interest which the Americans had in Russia at that time.
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Milder, Robert. « Alms for Oblivion ». Dans Exiled Royalties, 221–47. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195142327.003.0010.

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Abstract Shortly after Melville retired from the New York Custom House on December 31, 1885, his wife Lizzie wrote of a “great deal [of] unfinished work at his desk which will give him occupation.’’ A legacy from Lizzie’s brother Lemuel Shaw had eased the family situation and placed Melville in the happy predicament he later allegorized in the poem “The Rose Farmer”: whether to cultivate the rose (experience) for its yield of evanescent pleasure or laboriously to distill and crystallize its attar in a timeless but solitary art. Although “The Rose Farmer” ends inconclusively, a cozy epicureanism was at most a wishful fantasy for Melville, who had outlived his generational male relatives, nearly all of his friends, and his times, but not his longstanding obsessions, metaphysics and the taunting dream of reputation. At home, while generally calmer than before, Melville was still prey to “moods and occasional uncertain tempers,” surfacings of an emotional disquiet that hinted, as always with him, of an intellectual, spiritual, and vocational dis quiet. Toward the outward world he adopted the stance of a recluse, less from misanthropy than from a silent, self-protective pride. In the nearly ten years since Clare!his life had been collapsing inward toward a center of private musing, which in his physically and emotionally weakened state he nurtured carefully against inordinate hopes and the chance of real or imagined slights. Invited to join the Authors Club, a group of New York literati, in 1882, Melville accepted, then withdrew his acceptance on the ground that “he had become too much of a hermit” and that “his nerves could not stand large gatherings.” In most things having to do with society, he preferred not to.
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Actes de conférences sur le sujet "Authors Club (New York, N.Y.)"

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Fulantelli, Giovanni, Lidia Scifo et Davide Taibi. « THE ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS THEORY OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT TO EXPLORE THE STUDENT-SOCIAL MEDIA INTERACTION. » Dans eLSE 2021. ADL Romania, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12753/2066-026x-21-019.

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According to the Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory of human development ([1][2][3][4][5]), the development of each individual cannot be observed without considering its relationship with the development of other people and, above all, with the environment in which they live. The ecological orientation of Bronfenbrenner with respect to human development is therefore based on the interest in the progressive adaptation between an active organism that grows and its immediate environment: the individual-environment interaction that is determined by the relationships existing between the different environmental situations and the individuals present in that context is fundamental. Consequently, the ecological environment that is considered relevant to development processes is not limited to a single environmental situation but includes the interconnections between multiple environmental situations and the different influences of each individual. The evolution of the Internet-based technologies has brought to the development of solutions that have profoundly changed the way we live, including education. The advent of social media and social networks represents a milestone in the history of Internet, opening up to profound reflections on the "virtualization" of relationships, their growing importance in everyday life, and their role in education. Many authors argue that the Internet and the social media should no longer be considered as a tool to connect to a virtual reality that is separate from the real world, but as a place in which users live daily ([6][9][11][10]); consequently, they constitute one of the environmental situations mentioned by Bronfenbrenner. However, the risks deriving from the use of social media have been widely discusses in the literature ([7][8][12]). Adolescents are more exposed to the social media threats, since they are unable to perceive the profoundly different dynamics that govern offline and online networks. In this paper, having in mind the Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory of human development, we argue that the progressive adaptation of students to social media should be considered as a process of their growth and development. Furthermore, we analyze some corrections to be introduced in the educational paths of adolescents necessary to reduce the threats deriving from the use of social media and social networks in education. Reference Text and Citations [1] Bronfenbrenner, U. (1961). Toward a theoretical model for the analysis of parent-child relationships in a social context. In J. C. Glidewell (Ed.), Parental attitudes and child behavior (pp. 90-109). Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas. [2] Bronfenbrenner, U. (1973). Social ecology of human development. In F. Richardson (Ed.), Brain and intelligence: The ecology of child development (pp. 113-129). Hyattsville, MD: National Education Press. [3] Bronfenbrenner, U. (1974). Developmental research, public policy, and the ecology of childhood. Child Development, 45, 1-5. https://doi.org/10.2307/1127743 [4] Bronfenbrenner, U. (1994). Ecological models of human development. In T. Husen & T. N. Postlethwaite (Eds.), International encyclopedia of education (2nd ed., Vol. 3, pp. 1643-1647). Oxford, UK: Pergamon Press and Elsevier Science. [5] Bronfenbrenner, U., & Morris, P. A. (2006). The bioecological model of human development. In W. Damon (Series Ed.) & R. M. Lerner (Vol. Ed.), Handbook of child psychology: Theoretical models of human development (pp. 793-828). New York, NY: Wiley. [6] Carr, N. (2011). The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. [7] Livingstone, S., Haddon, L., G?rzig, A., & ?lafsson, K. (2011). Risks and safety on the internet: The perspective of European children. Full Findings. London: EU Kids Online, LSE. [Google Scholar] [8] Martin, F., Wang, C., Petty, T., Wang, W., & Wilkins, P. (2018). Middle school students' social media use. Journal of Educational Technology & Society, 21(1), 213-224. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26273881 [9] Musetti, A., Cattivelli, R., Giacobbi, M., Zuglian, P., Ceccarini, M., Capelli, F., et al. (2016). Challenges in internet addiction disorder: is a diagnosis feasible or not? Frontiers in Psychology, 7. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00842 [10] Musetti, A., Cattivelli, R., Zuglian, P., Terrone, G., Pozzoli, S., Capelli, F., et al. (2017). Internet addiction disorder o internet related psychopathology? [Internet Addiction disorder or Internet Related Psychopathology?]. Giornale Italiano di Psicologia, 44, 359-382. doi: 10.1421/87345 [11] Taymur, I., Budak, E., Demirci, H., Akdag, H.A., Gungor, B.B., & Ozdel, K. (2016). A study of the relationship between internet addiction, psychopathology and dysfunctional beliefs. Computers in Human Behavior,61, 532-536. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2016.03.043 [12] Willoughby, M. (2018). A review of the risks associated with children and young people's social media use and the implications for social work practice. Journal of Social Work Practice,33(2), 127-140. https://doi.org/10.1080/02650533.2018.1460587
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