Results 131 to 140 of about 2,981 (245)
Curating the Health Humanities: Perspectives from Literary Studies. [PDF]
French J, Read S.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract The intention guiding the design of this study was to amplify and listen to children's voices in early years research. The aim of this qualitative research meta‐synthesis was to engage in new analyses and interpretations about mindfulness through the lens of young children.
Elizabeth Joy Erwin +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Artificial intelligence-powered evaluation model for English translation education in university: combining quantitative and qualitative methods. [PDF]
Quan X, Sun Y.
europepmc +1 more source
Introduction: A Mnemosyne of Art & Science
Renaissance Studies, EarlyView.
Ana Duarte Rodrigues +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Knocking Off the Street: The Subversive Writings of Hong Kong's Grassroots Kings
ABSTRACT This article examines how two grassroots street artists in Hong Kong, the King of Kowloon (Tsang Tsou‐choi) and the Plumber King (Yim Chiu‐tong), intervene in the city's everyday visual order. Moving beyond celebratory collective memory narratives and easy analogies to graffiti, it frames their works as subversive urban practices that rework ...
Shizheng Liang, Zihong Zhang
wiley +1 more source
Isochrony in Old English Poetry: Two Performances of Cædmon’s Hymn [PDF]
Miriam Youngerman Miller
doaj
An unyielding voice: illness and late style in Radwa Ashour's Athqal min Radwa (Heavier than Radwa). [PDF]
AbdelRahman F.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract I propose the concept of delomization, the process whereby a sign comes to be understood as a symbol. I term such signs delomes. With rhematization and dicentization, delomization completes the triplet that linguistic anthropologists derive from Charles Sanders Peirce's third trichotomy.
Urmila Nair
wiley +1 more source
Shared reading as an intervention to improve health and well-being in adults: a scoping review. [PDF]
Järvholm K +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
The passion of butterflies: Notes on “translating” a Navajo poem by Rex Lee Jim
Abstract This essay honors three kinds of tradition. The first tradition is the poetry of Rex Lee Jim. The second tradition is the translation work of Blackhorse Mitchell. The third tradition is the discourse‐centered and ethnopoetic tradition of linguistic anthropology. I do this by focusing on a brief poem in Navajo by Rex Lee Jim.
Anthony K. Webster
wiley +1 more source

