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She and lectured
She was a lawyer in the legal IT sector and lectured at presentations by the Law Faculty of the University of Rome.
She lectured in Philosophy at the University of Birmingham from 1994 to 2004, and was Head of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Nottingham in 2007.
She has exhibited at many shows and lectured widely at venues such as World Science Fiction Conventions, San Diego Comic Cons, The Singapore Writers Festival, and Comics Masterclass in Sydney Australia, as well as many The Lord of the Rings conventions including Ring * Con, ELF, and ORC.
She also lectured on Reconstruction, women's rights, and temperance.
She wrote and lectured about ages 12 to 18 and beyond, but these programs were not developed during her lifetime.
She also lectured at Gakushuin University and at Tsuda College.
She has also lectured at Harvard's business, law, divinity and education graduate schools.
She tutored at the University of Melbourne in 1971 and 1972, tutored and lectured at Curtin University from 1973 to 1978 and was a lecturer with the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Western Australia from 1979 until 1983.
She teaches poetics at University of California, Berkeley, and has lectured in Russia and around Europe.
She has lectured at California State University, Long Beach and California State University, Los Angeles.
She lectured at Columbia University, Yale University, Bryn Mawr College, and Oberlin College.
She has done such training for corporations like General Electric, Exxon, AT & T, and IBM, as well as lectured to the FBI, IRS, US Navy, US Department of Education and US Postal Service.
She studied Dutch journals, old church sermons, and newspaper articles to acquaint herself with the city and lectured on the social history of New York.
She also toured Russia, Australia and New Zealand, and for a period of time she lectured at the music conservatory in New York City.
She has lectured at the University of California, San Diego in the Visual Arts Department.
She was a Resident Fellow at Harvard University's Institute of Politics in 2002 and has lectured on the future of the Republican Party at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.
She lectured and worked as a visiting professor in many universities around the world including: The American University of Beirut, 1995-University of Maryland, 1999-University of Sorbonne, 2002-Montpellier University, 2002-University of Lyon, 2003-Yale University, 2005-MIT Boston, 2005-University of Michigan, 2005.
She is a specialist in Middle East area studies ; negotiation theory ; foreign policy decision-making ; and international conflict management, on which she has lectured at the Centre for National Security Studies in Ottawa and at the NATO Defense College in Rome, Italy.
She has worked as a social worker and High School teacher, and has lectured in Psychology at the University of Manitoba.
She visited Portugal in 1934 and lectured there on Brazilian literature at the universities of Lisbon and Coimbra.
She lectured at MOMA again in June, 2008, presenting " Saucy Gamine, Reluctant Penitent, and Glorious Victor ," a review of her aunt's roller coaster ride in Hollywood as reflected in three of her films.
She also lectured annually at the Chatauqua Summer Music Institute in Chautauqua, New York, putting on lecture-recitals of twentieth-century music with pianist Harrison Potter throughout her career.
She has read and lectured on nature in Mumbai, at the Bombay Natural History Society and Prithvi Theatre .< ref >
She has lectured extensively nationally and internationally and has taught art at Rutgers University, where she was a professor for thirty years, and at the Städelschule in Frankfurt, Germany.

She and folklore
She survived in Greek folklore as the consort of Dionysos, with whom she was worshiped in some local cults.
She can be viewed as a transitional figure in her field, redirecting both anthropology and folklore away from the limited confines of culture-trait diffusion studies and towards theories of performance as integral to the interpretation of culture.
She majored in folklore and mythology at Brown University, and has a master's degree in religious studies.
She is commonly known by her nickname Granuaile in Irish folklore, and a historical figure in 16th century Irish history, and is sometimes known as " The Sea Queen of Connaught ".
She then attended University of Vilnius to pursue graduate studies in archaeology under Jonas Puzinas, linguistics, ethnology, folklore and literature.
She began to write at a very early age, and was strongly influenced by Grimms ' Fairy Tales and the tales of Charles Perrault, as well as local folklore and Norse mythology.
She lived with her elder son in poverty, supplementing their meagre income by writing for fashionable magazines and books based on the researches of her late husband into Irish folklore.
She taught literature and folklore at Laval, then in Montreal between 1971 to 1976.
She is one of the most important deities in Lithuanian folklore, similar to ancient Greek Ananke ( mythology ) and Moirai when Laima appears in trinity.
She has sought out hitherto unpublished folklore and legends of the different provinces.
She is known as Tallemaja ( pine tree Mary ) in Swedish folklore, and Ulda in Sámi folklore.
She had been introduced to their folklore at a very young age by her Afro-Cuban nanny and Afro-Cuban seamstress.
She may be a figure borrowed from folklore, and though she is often associated with the Irish Medb in popular culture and has been suggested by Thomas Keightley ( historian ) to be from Habundia, a more likely origin for her name would be from Mabel and the Middle English derivative " Mabily " ( as used by Chaucer ) all from the Latin " amabilis ".
She learned about 400 songs, together with the oral folklore that went with them.
She studied folklore and mythology at Brown University, and has a Masters degree in Religious Studies.
She appears to be related to the mythical figure Mélusine in French folklore.
She records and performs primarily her own original songs, which draw their inspiration from the mythology, folklore and history of various Celtic and non-Celtic cultures.
She bears some resemblance to the bakeneko of Japanese folklore.

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