This includes the definition of chick literature, the background of chick literature in the Philippines, why is it popular and some examples of this literature.
This includes the definition of chick literature, the background of chick literature in the Philippines, why is it popular and some examples of this literature.
Presents the 2010 winners of the Notable Books for a Global Society 2010 selected by the IRA Children's Literature and Reading Special Interest Group. This presentation was created by Karen Hildebrand.
This is a presentation given at the Fall 2014 Westerville City Schools Waiver Day by Karen Yingling, Blendon Middle School Librarian. An annotated bibliography is available.
African-American Children’s Picturebooks: Examining the Genres of Childhood, ...Angelina Bair, MLIS
By tracing a genre of resistance and cultural identity through African-American children’s picturebooks we can learn about the importance of how children understand themselves and their place within the community. Even during the current Golden Age of publishing, picturebooks still continue to lack African-American writers and illustrators. The question of why this is happening will be covered throughout this study by investigating statistical and scholarly sources. Also, the history of how African-Americans were portrayed in picturebooks through racist and stereotypical portrayals will be examined. Even today scholars continue to debate as to whether published works for children continue to contain racist depictions of Blacks. African-American children’s literature can be used as a tool to discuss how to reimagine racist stereotypes and be aware of the racist history within the stories marketed to children. The political benefit of teaching African-American picturebooks within community settings has key value for children of all races and backgrounds and provides role models that validate the importance of the Black experience in literature. Positive portrayals of African-Americans teach Black children the importance of diversity and prepare them for adulthood. By highlighting African-American children’s literature through, before or after school programs and camps, children will learn the importance of the Black cultural experience and understand the value of sharing and recognizing in the positive depictions of everyday Black life.
The Anaphora Literary Press was started as an academic press with the publication of the Pennsylvania Literary Journal (PLJ) in 2009. In the Winter of 2010, Anaphora began accepting book-length submissions. Anaphora has now published over 100 creative and non-fiction books. John Paul Jaramillo’s collection of short stories received an honorable mention for the Latino Literacy Now’s Mariposa Award Best First Fiction Book Award. Professors have taught from a few Anaphora books. Many Anaphora writers have scheduled readings at major bookstores. Anaphora books have also had several articles published about them in regional newspapers. PLJ has featured interviews with best-selling science fiction writers like Larry Niven, and young adult writers like Cinda Williams Chima, James Dashner and Carrie Ryan, as well as interviews with the winners of the Sundance and Brooklyn Film festivals. http://anaphoraliterary.com
Presents the 2010 winners of the Notable Books for a Global Society 2010 selected by the IRA Children's Literature and Reading Special Interest Group. This presentation was created by Karen Hildebrand.
This is a presentation given at the Fall 2014 Westerville City Schools Waiver Day by Karen Yingling, Blendon Middle School Librarian. An annotated bibliography is available.
African-American Children’s Picturebooks: Examining the Genres of Childhood, ...Angelina Bair, MLIS
By tracing a genre of resistance and cultural identity through African-American children’s picturebooks we can learn about the importance of how children understand themselves and their place within the community. Even during the current Golden Age of publishing, picturebooks still continue to lack African-American writers and illustrators. The question of why this is happening will be covered throughout this study by investigating statistical and scholarly sources. Also, the history of how African-Americans were portrayed in picturebooks through racist and stereotypical portrayals will be examined. Even today scholars continue to debate as to whether published works for children continue to contain racist depictions of Blacks. African-American children’s literature can be used as a tool to discuss how to reimagine racist stereotypes and be aware of the racist history within the stories marketed to children. The political benefit of teaching African-American picturebooks within community settings has key value for children of all races and backgrounds and provides role models that validate the importance of the Black experience in literature. Positive portrayals of African-Americans teach Black children the importance of diversity and prepare them for adulthood. By highlighting African-American children’s literature through, before or after school programs and camps, children will learn the importance of the Black cultural experience and understand the value of sharing and recognizing in the positive depictions of everyday Black life.
The Anaphora Literary Press was started as an academic press with the publication of the Pennsylvania Literary Journal (PLJ) in 2009. In the Winter of 2010, Anaphora began accepting book-length submissions. Anaphora has now published over 100 creative and non-fiction books. John Paul Jaramillo’s collection of short stories received an honorable mention for the Latino Literacy Now’s Mariposa Award Best First Fiction Book Award. Professors have taught from a few Anaphora books. Many Anaphora writers have scheduled readings at major bookstores. Anaphora books have also had several articles published about them in regional newspapers. PLJ has featured interviews with best-selling science fiction writers like Larry Niven, and young adult writers like Cinda Williams Chima, James Dashner and Carrie Ryan, as well as interviews with the winners of the Sundance and Brooklyn Film festivals. http://anaphoraliterary.com
Literature Essays. Student Essay Example 2 Literary Analysis in MLA The Roug...Stephanie Davis
Literary Essay - 7+ Examples, Format, Pdf | Examples. Student Essay Example 2 (Literary Analysis) in MLA – The RoughWriter’s .... 010 Essay Example How To Write Literary Writing 001 ~ Thatsnotus.
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Essay Hope. An essay on hope. . Hope and Reality Free Essay ExampleAshley Mason
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2137ad Merindol Colony Interiors where refugee try to build a seemengly norm...luforfor
This are the interiors of the Merindol Colony in 2137ad after the Climate Change Collapse and the Apocalipse Wars. Merindol is a small Colony in the Italian Alps where there are around 4000 humans. The Colony values mainly around meritocracy and selection by effort.
2137ad - Characters that live in Merindol and are at the center of main storiesluforfor
Kurgan is a russian expatriate that is secretly in love with Sonia Contado. Henry is a british soldier that took refuge in Merindol Colony in 2137ad. He is the lover of Sonia Contado.
The Legacy of Breton In A New Age by Master Terrance LindallBBaez1
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Explore the multifaceted world of Muntadher Saleh, an Iraqi polymath renowned for his expertise in visual art, writing, design, and pharmacy. This SlideShare delves into his innovative contributions across various disciplines, showcasing his unique ability to blend traditional themes with modern aesthetics. Learn about his impactful artworks, thought-provoking literary pieces, and his vision as a Neo-Pop artist dedicated to raising awareness about Iraq's cultural heritage. Discover why Muntadher Saleh is celebrated as "The Last Polymath" and how his multidisciplinary talents continue to inspire and influence.
2. CAITLIN MORAN
• Moran is a journalist, author, broadcaster and a feminist. Born in Brighton Moran is the British
Press Columnist of the year for 2010, Critic of the year 2011 and interviewer of the year in 2011
as well. In 2012, she was named columnist of the year by the London Press club, this is a
society for Journalists it used to be a London’s gentleman club in 1882 but has since changed.
On the London Press club’s website it states ‘ The Club provides opportunities for journalists
and others interested in the media to meet and learn of new developments, debate the latest
issues and explore our collective past communicators’. She has also been awarded the Culture
Commentator at the Comment Awards in 2013. She refers to her early life as ‘The Hunger
games’, living in a three bed council house with 7 siblings with an Irish father who has been
described as a former ”drummer and psychedelic rock pioneer” later on he was imprisoned on
the sofa due to Osteoarthritic (a joint disease that results from breakdown of joint cartilage
and underlying bone). After attending a secondary school for three weeks she was then home
schooled at the age of 11, she and her siblings received no proper education from their
parents so most of the days were passed away with games. She moved out when she could, at
the age of 18. Even though she might not have received a proper education she was always
keen on writing, this is shown with the success at the age of 13 when she won the Dillions
young readers contest for her essay on Why I like books.
3. • She began her journalist career with a weekly music publication, Melody Maker. She wrote a novel
during this time called The Chronicles of Narmo, this was inspired by being home-schooled. In
1992, she launched her TV career hosting a channel 4 show which ran for two series. Her next
project was inspired by her upbringing, in 2013 her TV series began airing in the UK. Raised by
wolves is a television sitcom which follows a loose account of the siblings’ youth in
Wolverhampton. The first series attracted 1.3 million viewers which made it channel 4’s second
highest rating in 2015. After a second series channel 4 cancelled the show in 2016 due to
“commitments to new programmes”. In October 2016 the Moran siblings campaigned for a third
series, if the campaign received £320,000 by November they could put on a one-off special
episode, this campaign was unsuccessful.
• How to Build a Girl was her next project after the first series of Raised by wolves, then followed
How to Be Famous and to conclude How to Change The World. In 2011, Ebury Press published
Moran’s book How to Be a Woman. How to Be a Woman is a non-fiction memoir which
documents Moran’s early life, it includes her views on feminism. When she wrote this popular book
her goal was to make feminism more approachable for every woman by telling stories of her life
struggles. Feminists are often seen as radical man-haters but her viewpoint of feminists are they
are actually advocates for true equality. In this book Moran calls for fifth wave feminism to rise up,
“But if there is to be a fifth wave of feminism, I would hope that the main thing that distinguishes it
from all that came before is that women counter the awkwardness, disconnect and bullshit of
being a modern woman not by shouting at it, internalizing it, or squabbling about it- but by simply
pointing at it and going ‘HA!’ instead.”- Page 13-14. The book itself has won three awards, 2011
Book of the year, 2011 Popular Non-Fiction Book of the Year and 2011 Listeners choice category.
In August 2013 she organised a 24 hour boycott of Twitter in protest against the organisations
failure to deal with offensive content posted.
CAITLIN MORAN
4.
5. BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR CAITLIN MORAN
1. .. (.). .. Available: https://londonpressclub.co.uk. Last accessed
24th January 2019.
2. .. (.). London Press. Available:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Press_Club. Last
accessed 24th January 2019.
3. .. (.). .. Available: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caitlin_Moran.
Last accessed 24th January 2019.
4. .. (.). Osteoarthritis. Available:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osteoarthritis. Last accessed
24th January 2019.
5. .. (.). Raised by Wolves. Available:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raised_by_Wolves_(TV_series).
Last accessed 24th January 2019.
6. .. (.). How to be a Woman. Available:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_to_Be_a_Woman. Last
accessed 24th January 2019.
6. FEM NEWSMAGAZINE
• Fem Newsmagazine is UCLA newsmagazine since 1973.The magazine focuses on social
and political issues as well as art and cinema. It contains news, poetry and short stories.
The topics range from anything, in the Fall 2017 issue there was articles with the topic
of education, religion and goddesses. The magazine is based in Mexico city where they
aim to bring a broad feminist perspective to Latin, America. This is in hope of inspiring
feminist movements. After a few years they had to stop with the print issue of this
magazine due to how expensive it was to produce it. “At FEM, we dedicate ourselves
to furthering the application of intersectional feminism to dismantle structures of
oppression. We recognize that oppression operates along a multitude of intersecting
axes, and we strive to present perspectives that might be otherwise marginalized,
erased, or silenced in the mainstream media. We aim to offer perceptive critique of
pop culture, report news and current events that we believe are essential to the
feminist cause, and provide a space for creative feminist work.”. FEM, UCLA’s feminist
newsmagazine, is dedicated to the empowerment of all women, the promotion of
human rights, the recognition of gender diversity, and the application of intersectional
feminism. FEM celebrates women’s right to equality in all aspects of life and appeals to
an audience that believes feminist ideology is still necessary to defeat sexism.
8. BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR FEM
NEWSMAGAZINE
1. .. (.). Fem newsmagazine. Available:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fem_(magazine). Last accessed 24th
January 2019.
2. Fem Newsmagazine. (2017). Divinity. Available:
https://issuu.com/femnewsmag/docs/fem_divinity_issue_color.
Last accessed ..
3. .. (.). .. Available:
https://apply.uclastudentmedia.com/applications/fem-
newsmagazine/. Last accessed 24th January 2019.
4. .. (.). .. Available: http://femucla.tumblr.com/about. Last accessed
24th january 2019.
5. fem newsmagazine. (2012). .. Available:
https://issuu.com/femnewsmag/docs/fem_final_annual8. Last
accessed 24th january 2019.
9. FANZINES- TEAL TRIGGS
• The book itself features 750 illustrations and covers the history of zines. his book is a high-impact
visual presentation of the most interesting fanzines ever produced. From the earliest examples,
now incredibly rare, created by sci-fi fans in the 1930s, it takes us on a journey of subcultures
through the decades. Superhero comics inspired a flush of zines in the 1950s and 60s. In the
1970s, the DIY aesthetic of punk was forged in fanzines such as Sniffing Glue and Search and
Destroy, while the 80s saw a flourishing of political protest zines as well as fanzines devoted to the
rave scene and street style. The riot grrrl movement of the 90s gave voice to a defiant new
generation of feminists, while the arrival of the internet saw many fanzines make the transition to
online. From Triggs LinkedIn page it states ‘Professional experience: design researcher with
funding from UK Funding councils and industry sources; have led developments of Master's level
courses in typography/graphic design, design writing criticism; experienced PhD supervisor.
Specialties: Design Research, Graphic Design History and Theory, teaching at postgraduate level,
PhD supervision in the areas of design, history, methods, information environments’.
11. BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR FEM
NEWSMAGAZINE
1. .. (.). Fanzines book. Available:
http://www.zinewiki.com/Fanzines_(book). Last accessed 27th Jan
2019.
2. .. (.). .. Available: https://www.linkedin.com/in/teal-triggs-
a552385/?originalSubdomain=uk. Last accessed 27th Jan 2019.
3. .. (.). .. Available:
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=oERqRQAACAAJ&dq=teal
+triggs&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi317Og3IbgAhWisXEKHXi
mDjMQ6AEIKjAA§. Last accessed 27th Jan 2019.
12. • The princess saves herself in this one is a autobiographic poetry book written by Amanda Lovelace. Amanda
Lovelace is a American poet who was named Goodreads Poet of the year in 2016 with her book ‘The princess
saves herself in this one’. She used her followings on social media to showcase her work and build a fanbase.
The author of five books previously retained a bachelors degree in English Literature. ‘The princess saves
herself in this one’ was self published in 2016 (when she was 25 years old) it was then republished by Andrews
McMeel publishing n 2017. She has written five books all together.
• The Princess saves herself in this one- this book was the first book to be published. Its about writing your own
ending. It includes a poetry collection in four parts: the princess, the damsel, the queen and you. This book
explores love, loss, grief, empowerment and inspiration.
• The witch doesn’t burn in this one- this book is the sequel to The Princess Saves Herself in This One. It has
been reviewed as “ A feminist celebration of the magic of womanhood”. This is a tale of empowerment and
encouragement.
• To make monsters out of girls- In this book Lovelace explores the memory of being in an abusive relationship.
She poses the eternal question: Can you heal once you’ve been marked by a monster, or will the sun always
sting?
• The mermaids voice returns in this one- Lovelace weaves throughout this empowering collection, they have
tried to silence the mermaid but Lovelace voice returns in this one. This book is not published yet so there isn't
much information about this book but its expected publication date is 5th March 2019.
• Slay those dragons- this book is served as a self care book and a gift for her readers. This book is for anyone
who needs a place to heal, reflect and take control. The book is meant to inspire the readers, to slay any
dragons who try to burn their castle down.
AMANDA LOVELACE
13.
14. BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR AMANDA LOVELACE
1. .. (.). Amanda Lovelace. Available: https://www.famousbirthdays.com/people/amanda-lovelace.html.
Last accessed 27th Jan 2019.
2. .. (.). Princess saves herself in this one. Available: https://www.booksamillion.com/p/Princess-Saves-
Herself-This-One/Amanda-Lovelace/978144948641. Last accessed 27th Jan 2019.
3. Adriana Moreno. (.). The witch doesn't burn in this one. Available:
https://www.hercampus.com/school/uprm/book-review-witch-doesn-t-burn-one-amanda-lovelace.
Last accessed 27th Jan 2019.
4. .. (.). Slay those dragons. Available: https://www.waterstones.com/book/slay-those-dragons/amanda-
lovelace/ladybookmad/9781449498498. Last accessed 27th Jan 2019.
5. .. (.). The mermaids voice returns in this one. Available:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/36297088-the-mermaid-s-voice-returns-in-this-one. Last
accessed 27th Jan 2019.
6. .. (.). .. Available: http://publishing.andrewsmcmeel.com/books/detail?sku=9781449494261. Last
accessed 27th January 2019.
7. .. (.). .. Available: https://www.amazon.co.uk/witch-doesnt-burn-Women-Magic/dp/1449489427. Last
accessed 27th Jan 2019.
15. MALE GAZE
• What is the ‘male gaze?’
• The male gaze suggests a sexualised way of looking that empowers men and objectifies women.
The concept of the male gaze was first introduced by Laura Mulvey. The male gaze takes many
forms, but can be identified by situations where female characters are controlled by the hero. For
feminists it can be thought of in three ways; How men look at women, how women look at
themselves and how women look at other women. Often in films the camera lingers on the curves
of the female body. Some theorists also have noticed the sexualising of the female body even in
situations where female sexiness has nothing to do with the product being advertised. This theory
has gone without criticism it has been said that some women enjoy being looked at- an example of
this are beauty pageants. In the book ‘Feminist film theory’ it states in chapter 5- ‘Visual Pleasure
and narrative cinema’, it says ‘Woman’s desire is subjugated to her image as bearer of the bleeding
wound; she can exist only in relation to castration and cannot transcend it’. This theory is
something which I will keep in mind when producing my research and creating my production.
16.
17. BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR MALE GAZE
1. Andy Simmons. (2016). Explainer: what does the ‘male gaze’ mean, and what about a female
gaze?. Available: https://theconversation.com/explainer-what-does-the-male-gaze-mean-and-
what-about-a-female-gaze-52486. Last accessed 27th Jan 2019.
2. Mr Smith. (2009). The Male Gaze. Available: https://www.slideshare.net/fleckneymike/the-male-
gaze-laura-mulvey. Last accessed 28th Jan 2019.
3. Sue Thornham (1999). Feminist Film Theory. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 58-69.