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Her and essays
" Her portraits Fanny Travis Cochran, Dorothea and Francesca, and Ernesta and her Little Brother, are fine examples of her skill in painting children ; Ernesta with Nurse, one of a series of essays in luminous white, was a highly original composition, seemingly without precedent.
Her writings and essays garnered her attention not only in Brazil, but also in Argentina and Uruguay.
Her writings and essays garnered her attention not only in Brazil, but also in Argentina and Uruguay.
Her essays and articles have been published in Women's Studies Quarterly, Signs, Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, Science Fiction Studies, and College English.
Her prized possession was a bound volume of the Dissenters ' Theological Magazine and Review, in which the family's pastor, the Reverend James Wheaton, had published two essays, one insisting that God had created the world in six days, the other urging dissenters to study the new science of geology.
Her essays on Pushkin and Poem Without a Hero, her longest work, were only published after her death.
Her collection of essays Men in Dark Times presents intellectual biographies of some creative and moral figures of the 20th century, such as Walter Benjamin, Karl Jaspers, Rosa Luxemburg, Hermann Broch, Pope John XXIII, and Isak Dinesen.
Her essays demonstrated that it was possible for a woman to be publicly engaged in politics, and other women authors emulated her.
Her first article, a review of a collection of essays by Emerson, was printed in the December 1, 1844, issue.
Her works include 12 novels and seven collections of essays ( including Pineapple Pudding and Song From Banana ) which have together sold over six million copies worldwide.
* Uncivil Liberty: An Essay to Show the Injustice and Impolicy of Ruling Woman Without Her Consent ( 1873 ) by Ezra Heywood one of first individualist feminist essays, by Ezra Heywood
Her essays and opinion pieces have appeared kin national newspapers including the New York Times and the Boston Globe, and on mass market magazines like House & Garden, Metropolitan Home, and Good Housekeeping.
A Heritage of Her Own: Toward a New Social History of American Women ( 2008 ), essays by scholars excerpt and text search
Her contributions took the form of musical essays offering commentary on contemporary issues, including record-financing in the music industry, the 2007 Writers Guild strike, and the popularity of tarty, uncreative Halloween costumes.
Her article was one of the first major essays that helped shift the orientation of film theory towards a psychoanalytic framework, influenced by the theories of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan.
Her essays on boxing were collected in the 2009 anthology One Ring Circus: Dispatches from the World of Boxing.
Her personal essays have appeared in Narrative Magazine and have been nominated for " Best American Essays " and the " Pushcart Anthology ".
Her literary works included dramatic pieces, papers and essays on subjects of public interest and in relation to women's duties, rights and place.
Her occasional journalism, essays, stories and poetry have appeared in numerous publications including The Globe and Mail, National Post, CV2, Write, NOW, eye weekly and This Magazine.
Her latest book of essays A Guided Tour Through the Museum of Communism: Fables from a Mouse, a Parrot, a Bear, a Cat, a Mole, a Pig, a Dog, & a Raven was published in February 2011 in the US by Penguin.
Her prose essays were remarkable for fineness of culture and peculiar restraint of style.
Her essays on the subject of journalism, conflict reporting and courage have been published by Harvard University ’ s Neiman Reports magazine and Columbia Journalism Review.
Her published works include five novels, a book of essays, four collections of poetry, four children's books, and two works of adolescent fiction.
Her teachers noted her essays for deep understanding of the subject and for imagery.

Her and introductory
Her introductory profile of Hammett was her first exercise in memoir writing.
Her works, with those of Marie-Madeleine de La Fayette, were edited by Etienne and Jay ( Paris, 1825 ); her novels were reprinted, with introductory matter by Lescure, in 1885 ; and her correspondence in the Lettres de Mmes.
Her first book was a collection of essays titled Metropolitan Life, released in 1978, followed by Social Studies in 1981, both of which are collected ( with a new introductory essay ) in The Fran Lebowitz Reader.

Her and studies
Her own studies were mostly self-directed.
On the other hand, " Her grades are so good that she's either very bright or studies hard " allows for the possibility that the person is both bright and works hard.
Other prominent academics associated with the University include Geoffrey Bennington, the creator of the MA programme in Modern French Thought ( Derrida, Lyotard ); Homi K. Bhabha ( postcolonialism ); Rachel Bowlby ( feminism, Woolf, Freud ); Geoff Cloke FRS ( Inorganic Chemistry ); Jonathan Dollimore ( Renaissance literature, gender and queer studies ); Katy Gardner ( social anthropology ); Gabriel Josipovici ( Dante, the Bible ); Michael Land FRS ( Animal Vision-Frink Medal )); Michael Lappert FRS ( Inorganic Chemistry ); Alan Lehmann FRS ( Genetics and Genome Stability ); ( Laura Marcus ( Woolf ); John Murrell FRS ( Theoretical Chemistry ); Peter Nicholls ( Pound, modernism ); John Nixon FRS ( Inorganic Chemistry )); Laurence Pearl FRS ( Structural Biology ); Guy Richardson FRS ( Neuroscience ); Jacqueline Rose ( feminism, psychoanalysis ); Nicholas Royle ( modern literature and theory ; deconstruction ); Alan Sinfield ( Shakespeare, sexuality, queer theory ); Norman Vance ( Victorian, classical reception ); Richard Whatmore & Knud Haakonssen ( intellectual historians ); Gavin Ashenden ( Senior Lecturer in English, University Chaplain, and Chaplain to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II ; Cedric Watts ( Conrad, Greene ); Marcus Wood ( postcolonialism ).
Her research interests are in feminism, African American studies, critical theory, Marxism, popular music and social consciousness, and the philosophy and history of punishment and prisons.
In 1962, Greenaway began studies at Walthamstow College of Art, where a fellow student was musician Ian Dury ( later cast in The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover ).
Her ancestors were learned people, fluent in many languages, known authorities on sacred Jewish texts and founders of a school of Talmudic studies.
Her studies at the Faculty of Science were interrupted by World War I.
This was first in an attempt to gain funding to continue with his studies and then also to make Her Majesty's Colonial Government aware of the need to preserve Bushman folklore as an important part of the nation's heritage and traditions.
Her paintings have, since 1961, been executed by assistants from her own endlessly edited studies.
Her teaching career and her own studies ended when she married Almanzo Wilder, whom she called Manly, on August 25, 1885, when she was eighteen and he was twenty-eight.
Her work is widely recognized as a formative influence on hundreds of other academic studies, government policy initiatives, and international agreements.
Her " sexual ( or sensual ) aggression " is noted by Buffy studies writers.
Her sociological studies showed that in areas where buskers regularly perform, crime rates tended to go down, and that those with higher education tended to appreciate and support buskers more than those of lesser learning.
Her practical experience and desire to help others is now backed by her continuing studies towards a Health Science degree at the Australian College of Natural Medicine.
Her studies there exposed her to mime, which helped develop her physical sensibilities.
Her painting can be divided into several distinct phases: her early work, before her studies in Paris ; her early paintings under the Fauvist influence of her time in Paris ; a post-impressionist middle period before her encounter with the Group of Seven ; and her later, formal period, under the post-cubist influences of Lawren Harris and American artist and friend, Mark Tobey.
While in Paris she obtained a Diploma in Group Leadership from the same University. Her Ph. D studies in Development Economics at the University of Paris were interrupted when she returned to Sri Lanka to enter politics, where her mother ’ s government had launched a wide ranging programme of socialist reform and development.
Her work The Ladder of Vision was acclaimed as a breakthrough in Dantean studies, upon its publication in the 1960s.
Her meta-analysis reveals that sex-differences are almost exclusively found in forced-choice studies.
Her technique may have been influenced by the music of Schoenberg, although they met only briefly during her studies in Germany.
Additionally, Iorga produced the first of several studies dealing with Balkan geopolitics in the charged context leading up to the Balkan Wars ( România, vecinii săi şi chestia Orientală, " Romania, Her Neighbors and the Eastern Question ").
Her areas of interest include semiotics, psychoanalysis, film theory, literary theory, feminism, lesbian and queer studies.
Her niece, Sonia Baig Mirza, studies there.
Her body studies, she insists, have always been concerned primarily with the body as the unit of an individual, a tendency she traces to her parents ' military pasts.

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