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Her and seminal
Her seminal works among laypeople are her memoir An Unquiet Mind, which details her experience with severe mania and depression, and Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicide, providing historical, religious, and cultural responses to suicide, as well as the relationship between mental illness and suicide.
Her books, which include her autobiography, The Life of Teresa of Jesus, and her seminal work, El Castillo Interior ( The Interior Castle ), are an integral part of the Spanish Renaissance literature as well as Christian mysticism and Christian meditation practices as she entails in her other important work Camino de Perfección ( The Way of Perfection ).
Her work with Anarcho-punk band Crass was seminal to the ' protest art ' of the 1980s.
He and Hill authored the religion's seminal text Principia Discordia, Or, How I Found Goddess, And What I Did To Her When I Found Her.
In 2011 he wrote two seminal reports for Her Majesty's Government on Early Intervention.
Her twin sister, Jessica Higgins, a New York based intermedia artist closely associated with seminal curator Lance Fung, late Fluxus gallerist Emily Harvey and The Artists Museum's and Construction In Process, performed and collaborated as a youth in original Fluxus related events.
Her seminal work, Woman in the Nineteenth Century, was published in 1845.
Her most famous piece is " Miss Sophia's Diary " ( 莎菲女士的日記 Pinyin: Shāfēi Nǚshì de rìjì ), a seminal work in the development of a voice for women's sexuality and sexual desire.
Her first musical experience was as the drummer for seminal no wave band DNA, which also featured East Village hero Arto Lindsay.
Her book, “ Improvisation for the Theater ,” which published these techniques, includes her philosophy, as well as her teaching and coaching methods and is considered the “ bible of improvisational theater .” Spolin ’ s contributions were seminal to the improvisational theater movement in the U. S. She is considered to be the mother of Improvisational theater.
She wrote Wonder Woman, and Her Sister's Keeper, a seminal Catwoman limited series.
Her best known book is the seminal history The Music of Black Americans ( 1971 ).
Other noteworthy Casady performances on Jefferson Airplane recordings include the seminal Top 10 hit " White Rabbit " ( on the album Surrealistic Pillow, 1967 ), " Rejoyce " and " Watch Her Ride " ( After Bathing at Baxter's, 1967 ), " Crown of Creation ", " If You Feel " and " The House at Pooneil Corners " ( Crown of Creation, 1968 ), and " Crazy Miranda " and " War Movie " ( Bark, 1971 ).
Her photo / text work The Bowery in two inadequate descriptive systems ( 1974 / 75 ) is considered a seminal work in conceptual and postmodern photographic practice.

Her and book
Her book titles, changed by American publishers, for example Ten Little Niggers to Ten Little Indians, were kept the same across the Atlantic, after bushels of fan mail.
Her award-winning 1974 novel The Dispossessed, a book in the Hainish Cycle, tells of the invention of the ansible.
Her book brought about a whole new interpretation on pesticides by exposing their harmful effects in nature.
Her first book, Child Whispers, a collection of poems, was published in 1922.
Her book Manic-Depressive Illness ( co-authored with Frederick K. Goodwin ) is the classic textbook on bipolar disorder.
In 1999 Freeman published another book, The Fateful Hoaxing of Margaret Mead: A Historical Analysis of Her Samoan Research, including previously unavailable material.
" Her next film was Blow, adapted from Bruce Porter's 1993 book Blow: How a Small Town Boy Made $ 100 million with the Medellin Cocaine Cartel and Lost It All.
Her " incredible controversy " is characterized by David Hartwell in the opening sentence of a book chapter entitled " New Wave: The Great War of the 1960s ": " Conflict and argument are an enduring presence in the SF world, but literary politics has yielded to open warfare on the largest scale only once.
Her wartime activities in German Occupied France were dramatised in the film Carve Her Name with Pride, starring Virginia McKenna and based on the 1956 book of the same name by R. J. Minney.
Her second book " Das Urteil " (" The Verdict ") from 1975 was a moderate success.
Her book, My Chicago ( ISBN 0-8101-2087-9 ), was published in 1992, and covers her life through her political career.
Her 1970 book, Origin of Eukaryotic Cells, discusses her early work pertaining to this organelle genesis theory in detail.
Her book Prayers or Meditations became the first book published by an English queen under her own name.
Her work was to have a dramatic effect on the British Society, polarising its members into rival factions as it became clear that her approach to child analysis was seriously at odds with that of Anna Freud as set out in her 1927 book An Introduction to the Technique of Child Analysis.
Her first foray outside children's literature was Bildhuggarens dotter ( Sculptor's Daughter ), a semi-autobiographical book written in 1968.
Her second book, A Way of Looking, won the Somerset Maugham award and marked a turning point, as the prize money allowed her to spend nearly three months in Rome, which was a revelation.
Her book, Patterns of Culture, did much to popularize the term in the United States.
Her latest book, Child No More, is the heartfelt story of losing her mother.
Her first book, The Ghetto and Other Poems was published in 1918.
Her third book, Red Flag 1927 collected much of her political poetry.
Her earliest professional work included greeting cards and juvenile magazine illustrations, and her first book, Flower Fairies of the Spring, was published in 1923.
Her first book, Seven Gothic Tales, was published in the U. S. in 1934 under the pseudonym Isak Dinesen.

Her and Children
File: Joshua Reynolds-Lady Elizabeth Delmé and her Children-WGA19337. jpg | Lady Elizabeth Delmé and Her Children, 1779
* Madame Charpentier and Her Children ( 1878 )
* April 19 – Bertolt Brecht's anti-war play Mother Courage and Her Children () receives its first theatrical production at the Schauspielhaus Zürich.
Josephine: the Empress and Her Children.
Her successful avoidance of further pregnancies would have been a natural reaction to having been assigned the role of an imperial brood mare, bearing a child a year only to have it taken away from her, but the importance of preserving her youthful appearance was an important influence in her decision: " Children are the curse of a woman, for when they come, they drive away Beauty, which is the best gift of the gods ".
One of Littlewood's most famous productions was the British première of Bertolt Brecht's Mother Courage and Her Children ( 1955 ), which she directed and also starred in the lead role.
* Mother Courage and Her Children ( Eilif ), National / Old Vic, 1965
Her Majesty ’ s Other Children: Sketches of Racism from a Neocolonial Age ( Rowman & Littlefield, 1997 ).
* Mother Courage and Her Children, by Bertolt Brecht, starring Fiona Shaw ( 2009 )
In 1838 Delacroix exhibited Medea about to Kill Her Children, which created a sensation at the Salon.
Her last on-screen role was in Children of Divorce in 1980.
D ' Agoult's other works include Lettres Républicaines in Esquisses morales et politiques ( 1849, collected articles ), Trois journées de la vie de Marie Stuart ( 1856 ), Florence et Turin ( 1862 ), Histoire des commencements de la république aux Pays-Bas ( 1872 ), " A Catholic Mother Speaks to Her Children " ( 1906, posthumously ) and Mes souvenirs ( 1877, posthumously ).
* A Catholic Mother Speaks to Her Children ", De Flavigny, Marie.
Her discovery by Henry Winkler during one of her ICODA theater performances ultimately led to her film debut in Children of a Lesser God ( 1986 ).
File: Asmus-jakob-carstens-night-and-her-children-sleep-and-death. jpg | Asmus Jacob Carstens, Night and Her Children, Sleep and Death, 1794, Black chalk on paper, 745 x 985 cm
Her first job in the early 1970s, was in a paediatrics clinic at Perth's children's hospital, Princess Margaret Hospital for Children, where her patients included thin and sick Aboriginal children flown in from remote western settlements.
* Bertolt Brecht-Mother Courage and Her Children ( written )
* Bertolt Brecht-Mother Courage and Her Children
Her third volume of poetry, A Chaplet of Verses ( 1861 ), was published for the benefit of a Catholic Night Refuge for Women and Children that had been founded in 1860 at Providence Row in East London.
The sixth scene of " Mother Courage and Her Children " by " Bertolt Brecht " is set in Ingolstadt, when count Tilly died in 1632, during the " Thirty Years War "
Her initial success came with the role of Amanda Cousins on the soap opera All My Children between 1981 and 1984.
Her big star break came in 1987, when she was cast as Marcy Rhoades ( later Marcy D ' Arcy ) on the hit Fox TV sitcom Married ... with Children.
In 2009, Shaw collaborated with Deborah Warner again, taking the lead role in Tony Kushner's translation of Bertolt Brecht's Mother Courage and Her Children.
** Mother Courage and Her Children by Bertolt Brecht

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