scholarly journals Work in Progress: The Role of Student Counselors at Cybersecurity Summer Camps

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Bernard ◽  
Jeremy Straub ◽  
Pranay Kumar Marella
Author(s):  
Fabiana Florescu ◽  

The purpose of this paper is to analyze the prigentian poetical experience of deconstruction and the poetry conceived as a work in progress based this time on an inter-art dialogue. At the crossroads of literary theory and comparative literature, we will explore the author’s efforts to redefine the limits of the poetical experience and his intentions to even erase the conventional boundaries between literary or artistic categories. Since the poetical oeuvres of Prigent, as well as his theoretical work advance various reflections on the limits of the language and the medium of expression, we aim to analyze how this aspects impact the relation between text and image in the prigentian poetical work. Eventually, our work interrogates the role of the intertextual and intermedial dialogue in Prigent’s attempt to radically redefine the limits of the poetical experience.


Author(s):  
Elliot P. Douglas ◽  
Mirka Koro-Ljungberg ◽  
David J. Therriault ◽  
Christine Lee ◽  
Zaria Malcolm ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alisa Lebow

Chantal Akerman's last film, No Home Movie (2015), deftly distills the filmmaker's key tropes—borders, exile, duration, waiting, transience, Jewishness, home—but none more so than the trope of the mother. Akerman often said that all of her work was autobiographical, even down to where to put the camera and how to frame the scene. This article explores some of her most explicitly autobiographical works (including Letters from Home [1976], Bordering on Fiction: D'Est [1995], Chantal Akerman par Chantal Akerman [1997], Selfportrait / Autobiography: a work in progress [1998], Là-bas [2006], and No Home Movie) to trace the increasingly apparent identity slippages between the filmmaker and her mother. Going well beyond the role of mother as muse, Akerman's films reveal a merger of identification with the mother so profound that her death can be seen to have signaled not only the end of the daughter's filmmaking but potentially of her life as well.


Antiquity ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 86 (333) ◽  
pp. 674-695 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver Dietrich ◽  
Manfred Heun ◽  
Jens Notroff ◽  
Klaus Schmidt ◽  
Martin Zarnkow

Göbekli Tepe is one of the most important archaeological discoveries of modern times, pushing back the origins of monumentality beyond the emergence of agriculture. We are pleased to present a summary of work in progress by the excavators of this remarkable site and their latest thoughts about its role and meaning. At the dawn of the Neolithic, hunter-gatherers congregating at Göbekli Tepe created social and ideological cohesion through the carving of decorated pillars, dancing, feasting—and, almost certainly, the drinking of beer made from fermented wild crops.


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