Page 152 • (12,473 results in 0.051 seconds)

  • : Conference ScheduleNatalie MayerModerator: Natalie Mayer Conference ScheduleKirsten ChristensenModerator: Kirsten M. Christensen, Professor of German, PLU Bio: Kirsten M. Christensen earned her Ph.D. in Germanic Studies, with an emphasis on medieval and early modern literature and culture, from the University of Texas at Austin in 1998. Her research has focused on writings by medieval women mystics. In particular, she explores the often fraught relationships between women mystics and their male

  • Theatre History (4) THEA 365: Theatre History: Modernism (4) THEA 385: Musical Theatre Performance: Golden Age (4) THEA 386: Musical Theatre Performance: Modern (4) THEA 425: Running Crew II (2) THEA 499: Capstone (2) Minors Theatre 16 semester hours of any THEA courses; at least 4 semester hours must be upper-division (300 or 400 level). Dance 16 semester hours, including: 12 semester hours of DANC courses plus 4 semester hours chosen from: additional DANC courses, KINS 277, 280, FTWL 223, 224, 225

  • major the following year. Due to the overwhelming amount of classes that featured gender and sexuality as a topic in addition to classes focusing on women, the Women’s Studies Executive Committee petitioned for the titular transition to Women’s and Gender Studies in 2001.Beginning in 2015, WMGS faculty began exploring a thorough reimagining of the program, to incorporate the critical study of sexuality and race into our major and minor. Core courses and electives were re-designed to incorporate new

  • , largely focused on HIV, tuberculosis, and women’s health. Ms. Bishop is an Adjunct Clinical Instructor at the University of Washington’s Department of Global Health and an invited member of the Civic Council for a program of the UW Jackson School of International Studies, representing perspectives on human rights for LGBTIQ people. She is also on the Advisory Panel of the Women in Global Health Seattle chapter. She holds Master’s degrees in Social Work and Public Health, both from Columbia University

  • the very women she’s trying to elevate as more than just dutiful domestic females. Mrs. Bennet and Lydia are depicted with inherently negative characteristics early in the novel, remain underdeveloped, and therefore, do not get much recognition in criticism, except to affirm their flaws or to highlight other, more admirable characters. My analysis focuses on Austen’s satirization of Mrs. Bennet’s nervous energy and Lydia’s body, as well as their talkative personalities and obsession with men in

  • 218 Women and Gender in World History - ES, GE HIST 220 Modern Latin American History - ES, GE HIST 237 History at the Movies - IT, GE HIST 305 Slavery in the Americas - ES, GE HIST 323 The Middle Ages - IT, GE HIST 333 Colonization and Genocide in Native North America - ES, GE HIST 335 Slavery, Pirates, and Dictatorships: The History of the Caribbean - IT, GE HIST 337 The History of Mexico - IT, GE HIST 348 Lewis and Clark: History and Memory - IT, GE HIST 351 History of the Western and Pacific

  • management, teamwork, and persistence, all of which have shaped how I conduct my nursing practice. How did it feel to be on a record-setting relay team this year? It’s hard for me to even express what it means to be part of the winning relay teams from this year’s NWC Championships. I am so grateful I got to swim with some of the most amazing people I’ve ever met, and that goes beyond just the other three swimmers that were on each relay. Our whole team is full of hardworking, dedicated women who I

  • as lips of a darker pigment and eyebrows that have been craved and then darkened, give the mask a lively appearance. The vertical grain of the wood on the upper lip, in which a lip plug (labret) is carved, accurately imitates the look of stretched skin. The lip plug itself has an outside diameter of two inches. In Makonde culture, the lip plug is called an ndona (pl. dindona). This circular wooden plug was inserted in the upper lip, and generally worn by Makonde women, although some Makonde men

  • traced through matrilineal clan affiliation,” in which ancestry is traced through female line and men move to the villages of the women they marry (Bortolot, Language). The makomba face masks, which depict females, but are worn by men in masked performances, can also be called lipiko (pl. mapiko), however, they are worn in front of the face rather than over the head as are the helmet masks. The plural, makomba denotes dances with face masks. Both face masks and helmet masks are used in Makonde

  • space, a 16-bed inpatient skills lab and additional simulation labs designed to duplicate the kind of equipment and furnishings found in a modern hospital room. They will be equipped with life-like mannequins that replicate patient breathing, pulse, heart sounds and other functions. Ground level donor wallRendering of what the ground level donor wall could look like. Ground level public lobbyRendering of what the ground level public lobby could look like. Renderings courtesy of McGranahan Architects