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93 Sentences With "afterlives"

How to use afterlives in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "afterlives" and check conjugation/comparative form for "afterlives". Mastering all the usages of "afterlives" from sentence examples published by news publications.

What binds these people together, if only in their afterlives?
By tracing the Soviet afterlives of Western art, Gilburd gestures toward a
These poems envision countless afterlives, each one more arresting than the last.
Erman's story is a critical addition to our understanding of Reconstruction and its afterlives.
In spite of the afterlives of South African apartheid, Serote was named the nation's 2018 National Poet Laureate.
Afterlives of the Black Atlantic remains on display at the Allen Memorial Art Museum through May 24, 2020.
Aestheticized in late and post-Soviet culture and the Western Cold War imaginary, he leads immeasurably many artistic afterlives.
If I weren't an atheist and believed in afterlives like most people in America, I'd be a very different person.
In "The Afterlives," Pierce has worked a similar magic, connecting us to fictional characters who seem, somehow, 100 percent real.
When stars run out of hydrogen fuel, they leave the main sequence and go on to have all sorts of afterlives.
What's unique to this go-round is that Stephenson's pet ideas about our digital lives and afterlives overshadow his book's urgency.
Afterlives of the Black Atlantic hits all the right notes, bringing a stunning variety of media, sources, and perspectives into dynamic conversation.
And each of the long-deceased Peruvian and Egyptian people are treated as individuals, even as they've become museum objects in their afterlives.
Walkers: Hollywood Afterlives in Art and Artifact continues at the Museum of the Moving Image (36-01 35th Avenue, Astoria, Queens) through April 10.
Kristin Ross's May '68 and Its Afterlives (2002) is published by University of Chicago Press and is available from Amazon and other online booksellers.
It's the sort of marketing challenge, frankly, that has frequently flummoxed studios, yielding movies that wind up being more appreciated via rich afterlives playing on cable.
"Spooky action at a distance," Einstein's mocking phrase for quantum mechanics, might equally be used to describe the long, unpredictable afterlives of artists and their works.
Just as the sweaters disappear from view, leaving behind only unformed yarn as their trace, so too do live performances vanish — transmigrate — into their documentary afterlives.
In Thomas Pierce's warm and inventive debut novel, "The Afterlives," reality is slippery, time is out of joint and profound disorientation is a feature of daily existence.
Now, states are attempting to get a better handle on the issue, most recently Florida, with bills intended to create a more consistent framework for our online afterlives.
" Working with other grim reapers, she must remove the souls of people and escort them into their afterlives — a sort of "Six Feet Under" meets "Buffy The Vampire Slayer.
Part love story, part ghost story, part sci-fi, The Afterlives is one man's journey to discover answers to increasingly bigger questions about human existence; a unique and thought-provoking read.
This season's standout episode, "San Junipero," uses the singularity as a backdrop for two women who fall in love, then have to decide whether their afterlives will be analog or digital.
This "Sylvan Constellation" addresses urban space limitations, the desire for a more eco-friendly death, and also our digital afterlives, with each "lamp" containing an individual's digital data alongside their remains.
Their afterlives up to that point have been an elaborate form of punishment orchestrated by Michael (Ted Danson), a demon rather than an angel who has goaded them into tormenting each other.
J0740+6620 likely sits near this threshold, which means it can shed light on the mysterious interior dynamics of neutron stars and yield insights into the deaths and afterlives of massive stars.
Sometimes there are vaguely karmic leanings, like the idea that good people have good afterlives, but it's more of a category of spiritual notions than any well-defined set of commitments or beliefs.
In Thomas Pierce's humorous, heartfelt debut novel The Afterlives, Jim Byrd becomes obsessed with trying to answer exactly that after he dies — for a few minutes — from a heart attack at age 30.
But Rose's experience is nonetheless analogous to that which might soon be shared by loved ones of those who turned to the likes of GoneNotGone, DeadSocial, and SafeBeyond to effectively curate their digital afterlives.
But as Walkers: Hollywood Afterlives in Art and Artifact, the Museum of the Moving Image's auspicious foray into exhibiting contemporary art, wryly suggests, it might be film and its iconic images that help stave off decay.
But their parallel cultural afterlives illuminate the process by which some great authors are transformed into icons, beloved almost as much for their imagined personalities and our feelings of intimacy with them as for anything they wrote.
Fascinated by such radical forgiveness, Leun probes the characterization of Biehl as a martyr to the cause of black South African liberation, and examines the murder, the trials, and the afterlives of witnesses, detectives, and the accused.
By extending the timeline a few years to illuminate the afterlives of the protests, the exhibition shows how participants used what they learned for radical ends, including the early iconography of the Women's Liberation Movement, begun in 1970.
The conjunction of different entities, as in the fog machine and sweatshirt, or their presentation — for instance, the baby blanket's transformation into an eerie "curtain" — endows them with afterlives as art, but shadowed by their histories and associations.
The most engrossing of these shows is "In Search of Expo 228," an incisive, sometimes wistful exploration of the fair and its afterlives by nearly two dozen contemporary artists, on view at the Musée d'Art Contemporain de Montréal, known as MAC.
Having led tours in the cemetery's 478 acres since 2011, I'm looking forward to exploring the art afterlives of the Victorian burial ground, from Jean Michel-Basquiat to lesser-knowns like Violet Oakley, the first woman to get a public mural commission.
The speed dating format gives a brief glimpse into the lives (afterlives?) of these nine different ghosts, each of whom are in different places in regards to their acceptance of being dead, but also their understanding of what they want for themselves.
Resurrecting a person, bringing him back almost in body, only to let him flicker out again like a light—that reminds us of what we never forget, which is that whatever afterlives there are, or could be, won't ever be in this world.
You really have to get Mr. Herz's book "African Modernism: The Architecture of Independence," a 640-page doorstop published when this show first appeared in Germany, to appreciate the breadth of modern African architecture, as well as its political significance and contemporary afterlives.
When Joe sets up an Instagram account for his alias Will Bettelheim in Episode 2, he chooses three books to feature: Gold Fame Citrus by Claire Vaye Watkins, Sum: Tales from the Afterlives by David Eagleman, and The Power by Naomi Alderman.
It's impossible for a religious president, a religious Supreme Court, and a 100 percent religious US Congress (all who state they publicly believe in afterlives) to care enough about medical, scientific, and technological progress when they all think they're going to be immortal angels in heaven someday.
She describes the work as a "neon, sex-shop sign, sewer-y autumnal landscape," containing in its fluid molecules all the "projected glamour and melancholy" of the L.A. environs and contained in the afterlives of things, including those that we are encouraged to rub onto our bodies or ingest.
Other pets are not so lucky, and not just Orville, the cat turned into a helicopter by Bart Jansen (although who knows what cats desire for their afterlives), or the cat of artist Tinkebell, made into a purse (to be fair, not just for spectacle, but a comment on the ease with which we use other animals for leather).
The same was largely true of Lost when it was on the air, and The Sopranos inspired its share of "who's going to die next" fan fervor, but both shows have largely gone on to healthy afterlives, where they are discussed more for their larger qualities now that all their cards are out on the table.
Over polentina soup and fried sole (for Ms. Walker) and butter lettuce salad and tagliatelle with mushroom ragù (for Mr. Toibin), followed by a moist almond cake with Chantilly cream for dessert, the pair discussed the afterlives of their novels, giving voices to characters who haven't historically enjoyed them, and their personal quests to find a home in the world.
As we wrapped up our most recent unit — "Hamlet" and its afterlives — our discussion about "Hamlet" alongside Tom Stoppard's "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" and Salman Rushdie's "Yorick" ended with a collective "aha" moment: We came to the realization that "Hamlet" purposefully leaves the audience with unanswered questions to acknowledge the constant search for objective truth in a subjective world.
As Gilroy would have it, this produced "a culture that is not specifically African, American, Caribbean, or British, but all of these at once, a black Atlantic culture whose themes and techniques transcend ethnicity and nationality to produce something new …" In a show that opened earlier this year at the Allen Memorial Art Museum at Oberlin College, Afterlives of the Black Atlantic teases out aesthetics and individual visions that arise from this context.
" Every piece felt steeped in the sepia tones of McKean's unsettling art even if it seemed to make only the most glancing contact with the image's contents: Valente's "No One Dies in Nowhere," for instance, opens next to a pencil-sketched image of a bird-headed person in a long thick scarf and coat, but spins from it an affecting story of afterlives that's C. S. Lewis's "The Great Divorce" dressed in hard-boiled noir by way of "The Pilgrim's Progress.
In August 24, 2020, Blizzard announced that an animated series called Afterlives will premiere on August 27, during the Gamescom 2020 event.
1995, B/W Photographs. Featured in ANU /Verso 2019 publication Afterlives of Chinese Communism edited by Christian Sorace, Ivan Fraceschini, nad Nicholas Lumbere.
His first full- length short story collection, Before and Afterlives, was the recipient of the Shirley Jackson Award for Best Single-Author Collection in 2013.
Kostis Velonis (born 1968) is a Greek sculptor. He is known for exploring the afterlives of unrealized Modernist and avant-garde projects. Many of Velonis' sculptures explore awkwardness and the slapstick, and he is particularly interested in "stumbling" as an important aesthetic and political category.
Juda was present to photograph and document Graham Sutherland's portrait of Sir Winston Churchill, which was commissioned in 1954 by the past and present members of the House of Lords and the House of Commons of the United Kingdom in celebration of Churchill's eightieth birthday.Lichtig, Toby."The afterlives of art" The Times Literary Supplement. Retrieved January 2014.
Book of the week: Sum: Forty Tales From the Afterlives by David Eagleman, The Week, March 6, 2009. In September 2009, Sum was ranked by Amazon as the #2 bestselling book in the United Kingdom.Stephen Fry tweet sends book's sales rocketing, The Guardian, September 11, 2009.Stephen Fry's Twitter posts on David Eagleman novel sparks 6000% sales spike, The Telegraph, September 11, 2009.
She introduces Claire to her half- brother, Jack Shephard. The series finale, "The End", revealed that the "alternate timeline" was in fact a form of purgatory for the characters, after their respective deaths, waiting to move on. Ilana, who is credited at the beginning of the episode, does not appear in the episode; as such, she is not among those characters who "move on" to their afterlives.
She told The Bookseller's Anna James that the application process had involved a three-hour written examination on the single word 'novelty', adding that, "I wrote about Derridean deconstructionist theory and Christmas crackers [...] I feel like they might have let me in despite rather than because of it". She subsequently completed a doctoral thesis on "the literary and textual afterlives" of the English metaphysical poet and cleric John Donne.
Various myths demonstrate her role in facilitating the afterlives of the deceased as the nurturing and purifying "Mistress of Pure Water". However, Taweret and her fellow hippopotamus goddesses of fertility should not be confused with Ammit, another composite hippopotamus goddess who gained prominence in the New Kingdom. Ammit was responsible for devouring the unjust before passing into the afterlife. Unlike Ammit, the other hippopotamus goddesses were responsible for nourishment and aid, not destruction.
During Ghost Festival and Qingming Festival, apart from joss paper, people burn Zhizha offerings to worship gods and show respect to the ghosts of the deceased. While similarly, Zhizha is essential for a traditional Taoist funeral. Since the Chinese generally believe in an afterlife, anything needed for the deceased to enjoy their afterlives, such as houses, furniture, food, gadgets and even servants will be made into Zhizha models and burned as offerings to them.
Richter wrote the score to Infra as part of a Royal Ballet-commissioned collaboration with choreographer Wayne McGregor and artist Julian Opie. The production was staged at the Royal Opera House in London in 2008. In 2011, Richter composed a chamber opera based on neuroscientist David Eagleman's book Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives. The opera was choreographed by Wayne McGregor and premiered at the Royal Opera House Linbury Studio Theatre in 2012.
To Plantard's surprise, all of his claims were fused with the notion of a Jesus bloodline and popularised by the authors of the 1982 speculative nonfiction book The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, whose conclusions would later be borrowed by Dan Brown for his 2003 mystery thriller novel The Da Vinci Code.Chapter 21 by Cory James Rushton, "Twenty-First-Century Templar", p. 236, in Gail Ashton (editor), Medieval Afterlives in Contemporary Culture (Bloomsbury Academic, 2015. ).
52 Week Eighteen (September 6, 2006) Dibny journeys with the helm through the afterlives of several cultures, where he is cautioned about the use of magic. During Week 27, the Spectre promises to resurrect Sue in exchange for Dibny's taking vengeance on Jean Loring, but Dibny is unable to do so.52 Week Twenty-Seven (November 8, 2006) During Week 32, Ralph ventures to Nanda Parbat and gets into a fight with the Yeti. The Perfect Accomplished Physician comes to the rescue.
Meridian Magazine excerpts from All Hail to Christmas In his writings Kimball has dealt with how sports and race relations interplay in Utah history.Article by Kimball on the 1910 boxing showdown between Johnson and Jeffries Kimball has also contributed articles to such publications as the Nine: The Journal of Baseball History and Culture and Chicago Sports. In 2017 his work Legends Never Die: The Afterlives of American Athlet was published by the Syracuse University Press. It was described as a "highly engaging book".
Between 1963 and 1966, French television broadcast a medievalist series entitled Thierry La Fronde (Thierry the Sling). This successful series, which was also shown in Canada, Poland (Thierry Śmiałek), Australia (The King's Outlaw), and the Netherlands (Thierry de Slingeraar), transposes the English Robin Hood narrative into late medieval France during the Hundred Years' War.See Richard Utz, "Robin Hood, Frenched", in: Medieval Afterlives in Popular Culture, ed. by Gail Ashton and Daniel T. Kline (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012): 145–58.
Nandy was born in Calcutta, India, on 21 May 1936, into a middle-class Bengali family,Olivier Esteves, Stéphane Porion, The Lives and Afterlives of Enoch Powell: The Undying Political Animal (Routledge, 2019, ), p. 147 and was educated at St Xavier's College. He arrived in Britain in March 1956 with the aim of getting a university degree, and worked for a time on the night shift at Cadbury Schweppes. He was then offered a place in the English Literature Department at the University of Leeds.
The play centers on the afterlives of four characters who, finding themselves in a mysterious 'Void', are informed by the equally enigmatic Guide that they must choose one memory from their lives in which to spend eternity. The remainder of the play follows their individual memories and searches for self-knowledge. Although heralded at the time as new, the premise of the play is, in fact, quite similar to that of Japanese director Hirokazu Koreeda's 1998 film 'After Life', in which the concept was less stylized.
Sanders, Julie. Shakespeare and Music: Afterlives and Borrowings, Cambridge, UK 2007 BBC Radio 3 aired another radio adaptation on 22 February 1979, directed by David Spenser, with music by Derek Oldfield. The cast included Michael Kitchen as Ferdinand; John McEnery as Berowne; Anna Massey as the Princess of France; Eileen Atkins as Rosaline; and Paul Scofield as Don Adriano. A modern-language adaptation of the play, titled Groups of Ten or More People, was released online by Chicago-based company Littlebrain Theatre in July 2020.
His research interests center around Italian Renaissance art, as well as the art of 17th and 18th century France, Italy, and Spain. He has published on a variety of subjects in Renaissance and Baroque art. His book, Fra Angelico at San Marco, published by Yale University Press, won the 1993 George Wittenborn Memorial Book Award, the 1994 Eric Mitchell Prize and was a finalist in the Premio Salimbeni Competition in Italy. His book-in-progress is entitled Made Men: Afterlives of the Classical Nude.
During the event known as 52, a voice from within the helm of Doctor Fate speaks to Ralph Dibny and promises to fulfill his desires if he makes certain sacrifices. Dibny journeys with the helm through the afterlives of several cultures, where he is cautioned about the use of magic and sees Felix Faust. He is told about their deals by the voice. The Spectre promises to resurrect his late wife Sue in exchange for Dibny's taking vengeance on her murderer, Jean Loring, but Dibny is unable to do so.
Ross received her Ph.D. from Yale University in 1981 and since then has written a number of books, including The Emergence of Social Space: Rimbaud and the Paris Commune (1988), Fast Cars, Clean Bodies: Decolonization and the Reordering of French Culture (1995) and May '68 and its Afterlives (2002). She edited Anti-Americanism (2004) with Andrew Ross (no relation). In 2015, her book Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune appeared. For Fast Cars, Clean Bodies, Ross was awarded a Critic's Choice Award and the Lawrence Wylie Award for French Cultural Studies.
The Book of Watchers in the Qurān, page 10-11 However, like in the story of Iblis, the story of Harut and Marut does not contain any trace of angelic revolt. Rather, the stories about fallen angels are related to a rivalry between humans and angels.Patricia Crone. The Book of Watchers in the Qurān, page 11 As the Quran affirms, Harut and Marut are sent by God and, unlike the Watchers, they only instruct humans to witchcraft by God's permission,Annette Yoshiko Reed Fallen Angels and the Afterlives of Enochic Traditions in Early Islam University of Pennsylvania 2015 p.
The outcome of the simulated war will determine whether societies are allowed to run artificial Hells, virtual afterlives in which the mind-states of the dead are tortured. The Culture, fiercely anti-Hell, has opted to stay out of the war while accepting the outcome as binding. Vatueil is a soldier who has fought his way up the ranks of the war game to a position where he can determine policy. He is instrumental in the decision to cheat—first by attempting to hack into and subvert the war-game, and when this fails by moving the simulated war into the real world.
The Association for Asian Studies, continue Harutoonian and Miyoshi, therefore missed the opportunity to make the study of Asia into a part of the general learning of the world rather than closing off the study of individual nations. Areas Studies also suffers from accepting the traditional disciplines. The newer cultural studies, on the other hand, rise above national borders or dissolve disciplinary boundaries.Harootunian, Harry, and Masao Miyoshi. 2002. “Introduction: The ‘Afterlife’ of Area Studies.” In Learning Places: The Afterlives of Area Studies, edited by Masao Miyoshi and H.D.Harootunian, Durham, N.C., and London: Duke University Press p.
Ralph seeks out the helmet of Doctor Fate, which promises to revive Sue if he makes certain sacrifices. With unwilling assistance of a demon he tied into knots using Gingold, Dibny journeys with the helmet through the afterlives of several cultures, where he is cautioned about the use of magic for personal gain. After several failed attempts to resurrect his wife, Dibny prepares a spell in Doctor Fate's home, the Tower of Nabu. Dibny puts the helmet on, points the gun at his temple, then shoots the helmet to reveal it is actually the sorcerer Felix Faust.
However, in other cultures, this act of worship does not confer any belief that the departed ancestors have become some kind of deity. Rather, the act is a way to express filial duty, devotion and respect and look after ancestors in their afterlives as well as seek their guidance for their living descendants. In this regard, many cultures and religions have similar practices. Some may visit the graves of their parents or other ancestors, leave flowers and pray to them in order to honor and remember them, while also asking their ancestors to continue to look after them.
In 2018, she starred in the critically acclaimed horror film A Quiet Place, directed by her husband John Krasinski, and in the musical fantasy Mary Poppins Returns, in which she played the title character. The former earned her the Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Supporting Actress. Alongside her screen work, Blunt has provided her voice to several animated films, including Gnomeo & Juliet (2011) and its sequel Sherlock Gnomes (2018). She has also narrated the audiobook Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives in 2010, and recorded songs for the soundtrack of her films Into the Woods, My Little Pony: The Movie, and Mary Poppins Returns.
In 1930 Alfred was sold to an Italian who, after bringing him to Europe, sold him on to an animal dealer. Bristol Zoo, already successful in rearing chimpanzees, acquired Alfred for £350.H. Paddon, ‘Biological Objects and "Mascotism": The Life and Times of Alfred the Gorilla’ in S.J.M.M. Alberti, The Afterlives of Animals - A Museum Menagerie (2011) Alfred spent a few months housed in Rotterdam in 1930 before continuing to Bristol Zoo.A. C. Van Bruggen, ‘International Zoo News’, 1 July 2007. Alfred was named after Alfred Mosely, Companion of Honour,a benefactor of the zoo, it was his gift to the NationHarry Edwards, ‘The Old Cliftonian’, 13 July 1993.
He then destroys the afterlives of all the cultures of the world, freeing the dead to walk the Earth. The newly super-powered Hercules assembles a second God Squad to battle Mikaboshi, who now calls himself the Chaos King. The combined efforts of the God Squad, Alpha Flight, the Hulk family, and deceased members of the Avengers and X-Men manage to keep the Chaos King's armies at bay, while Cho and Galactus work on a way to transport the entire Earth into the safety of the Continuum universe. Hercules is able to seal off the Chaos King in the Continuum, saving the world.
Building on this work, Sharkey has written many articles on the history of Christian missions and world Christianity. With Elena Vezzadini (CNRS, Institut des mondes africaines [IMAF], Paris) and Iris Seri-Hersch (Université d’Aix-Marseille), she edited in 2015 a special issue of the Canadian Journal of African Studies, on the theme of “Rethinking Sudan Studies” after the 2011 secession of South Sudan. Her own article in this collection traces the life and “afterlives” of a giraffe who went from Sudan to France in 1826 (and whose skeleton still stands on display in the Muséum d'Histoire naturelle de La Rochelle). This article contributes to the study of Franco-Sudanese relations and environmental history in the Nile Valley.
John Baker and Jayne Carroll, "The Afterlives of Bede's Tribal Names in English Place-Names" (2020) The close village of Menith Wood also has a Celtic name meaning mountain/hill, this time derived from the Welsh language word "mynydd". Nearby, too, lies the River Teme, whose name comes from the Celtic "tamesis" (the dark one), the same as the rivers Thames and Tame. All of this points to a strong Celtic speaking population having still resided in this area after the Anglo Saxons migrated into the region and took over the local government. Following the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 Pensax Parish ceased to be responsible for maintaining the poor in its parish.
141–156 The 1941 film Playmates features bandleader Kay Kyser and Shakespearean actor John Barrymore playing themselves in a plot which involves Kyser producing an adaptation featuring "swing musician Romeo Smith and opera singer Juliet Jones, with Juliet's father, a devotee of classical music, as obstacle to their romance."Sanders, Julie "Shakespeare and Music: Afterlives and Borrowings" (Polity Press, 2007, ) p.24 André Cayatte's Les Amants de Vérone (France, 1949) features Georgia (Anouk Aimée), the daughter of the declining Maglia family (roughly the equivalent of Shakespeare's Capulets) who meets her Romeo in working-class Angelo (Serge Reggiani) while working as stand-ins for the actors playing Romeo and Juliet in a film of the play.Rosenthal, p.
An Old English name abele, now never used, is derived from the Latin albellus, white, by way of Old French aubel and Low German name abeel. Leuce/Leuka, the "White Poplar"; Leuce or Leuka (Ancient Greek: Λεύκη) ("White" or specifically "White Poplar") was the most beautiful of the nymphs and an Oceanid, a daughter of Oceanus. Pluto fell in love with her and abducted her to the underworld. She lived out the span of her life in his realm, and when she died, the god sought consolation by creating a suitable memorial of their love: In the Elysian Fields, where the pious spend their afterlives, he brought forth a white tree into existence from her body, which became sacred for him from that moment on.
Roos' book Goldfish, one of Reaktion Books' Animal series, was published in September 2019. The book was dedicated to a pet goldfish she owned as a child, named Speedy. Her other books include Web of Nature: Martin Lister (1639-1712): the first scientific arachnologist (Brill, 2011); Salt of the Earth: Natural Philosophy, Chymistry and Medicine 1650-1750 (Brill, 2007), the first volume of the corpus of Lister’s correspondence (2015, Winner of John Thackray Medal), as well as Archival Afterlives: Life, Death, and Knowledge- Making in Early Modern British Scientific and Medical Archives (Brill), co- edited with Vera Keller and Elizabeth Yale. Her next book, Martin Folkes (1690-1754): Newtonian, Antiquary, Connoisseur will be published with Oxford University Press in 2021.
In the Post-Roman period the traditional division of the Anglo-Saxons into Angles, Saxons and Jutes is first seen in the Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum by Bede; however, historical and archaeological research has shown that a wider range of Germanic peoples from Frisia, Lower Saxony, Jutland and possibly southern Sweden moved to Britain during this period. Scholars have stressed that the adoption of specifically Anglian, Saxon and Jutish identities was the result of a later period of ethnogenesis.Toby F. Martin, The Cruciform Brooch and Anglo-Saxon England, Boydell and Brewer Press (2015), pp. 174-178John Baker and Jayne Carroll, "The Afterlives of Bede's Tribal Names in English Place- Names" (2020) Following the settlement period, Anglo-Saxon elites and kingdoms began to emerge; these are traditionally grouped together as the Heptarchy.
The volume Harutoonian edited with Masao Miyoshi in 2002, Learning Places: The Afterlives of Area Studies is a collection of essays that critically examine the rise of Area Studies during the Cold War, then analyze the late 20th century, post-Cold War "need of foreign governments, mostly outside Euro-America, to pay American universities and colleges to teach courses on their histories and societies." The Japanese, Korean, and Taiwanese governments especially felt this need. The editors argue that Area Studies movement was based on the wartime need to study the enemy, but "fifty years after the war's end, American scholars are still organizing knowledge as if confronted by an implacable enemy and thus driven by the desire to either destroy it or marry it." Universities seek to maintain this structure by soliciting these foreign donations.
All these races are subdivisions of humanity, but are distinguished by whether they live on Earth or in one of the afterlives, by possession of thematically contrasting supernatural powers, and by the use of aesthetics drawn from the artistic traditions of different real-life regions. The main character of Bleach is a Japanese teenager named Ichigo Kurosaki who has the ability to interact with ghosts. One day he is visited by a spirit named Rukia Kuchiki, who is a Soul Reaper from the Soul Society whose mission is to deal with hungering lost souls known as Hollows. When he sees Rukia getting grievously wounded by a Hollow in his presence, Ichigo is granted her powers of exorcism and psychopompy to carry out Rukia's Soul Reaper duties as she recovers.
Ancient Sumerian cylinder seal impression showing the god Dumuzid being tortured in the underworld by galla demons The ancient Mesopotamian underworld, most often known in Sumerian as Kur, Irkalla, Kukku, Arali, or Kigal and in Akkadian as Erṣetu, although it had many names in both languages, was a dark, dreary cavern located deep below the ground, where inhabitants were believed to continue "a shadowy version of life on earth". The only food or drink was dry dust, but family members of the deceased would pour libations for them to drink. Unlike many other afterlives of the ancient world, in the Sumerian underworld, there was no final judgement of the deceased and the dead were neither punished nor rewarded for their deeds in life. A person's quality of existence in the underworld was determined by his or her conditions of burial.
The phenomenon of "trophy- taking" was widespread enough that discussion of it featured prominently in magazines and newspapers, and Franklin Roosevelt himself was reportedly given, by U.S. Representative Francis E. Walter, a gift of a letter-opener made of a Japanese soldier's arm (Roosevelt later ordered that the gift be returned and called for its proper burial). The news was also widely reported to the Japanese public, where the Americans were portrayed as "deranged, primitive, racist and inhuman". This compounded by a previous Life magazine picture of a young woman with a skull trophy was reprinted in the Japanese media and presented as a symbol of American barbarism, causing national shock and outrage.Dickey, Colin: Afterlives of the Saints The behavior was officially prohibited by the U.S. military, which issued additional guidance as early as 1942 condemning it specifically.
He was a member of the New Ireland Forum in 1983. In the 1980s he was a member of the Irish Commission for Justice and Peace, and played a prominent part in its efforts to resolve the 1981 Irish hunger strike. His role was credited in Ten Men Dead by David Beresford,David Beresford, Ten Men Dead, Harper Collins Publishers (1987)Biting the Grave by P. O'MalleyBiting the Grave by Padraig O'Malley, Beacon Press, 1990 and, more recently, in Blanketmen and Afterlives by former Provisional Irish Republican Army volunteer Richard O'Rawe.Blanketmen by Richard O'Rawe, New Island, 1990 Following the New Ireland Forum in 1984 and John Hume's decision to represent the redrawn Londonderry constituency as Foyle and a safe seat, Logue left the Dublin-based, National Board for Science and Technology and joined the European Commission in 1984 in Brussels.
Ross has been exhibiting since the late 1980s. She has completed solo exhibitions at the Bett Gallery in Hobart and at Gallery Barry Keldoulis and the Michael Reid Gallery in Sydney as well as the Blue Mountains Cultural Centre in Katoomba. Her work has featured in group exhibitions including Colonial Afterlives, Salamanca Arts Centre, Hobart (2015); South, Hazelhurst Regional Gallery, Gymea (2014); Australian Voices, Fine Art Society Contemporary, London (2013); Wonderland: New Contemporary Art from Australia, Museum of Contemporary Art, Taipei (2012); Lycett and Ross, Campbelltown Arts Centre, Campbelltown (2011); Curious Colony: A twenty first century Wunderkammer, Newcastle Regional Art Gallery, Newcastle (2010); I’m worst at what I do best, Parramatta Artist Studios, Sydney (2009); Lines in the Sand: Botany Bay Stories from 1770, Hazelhurst Regional Gallery, Sydney (2008); 2007: The Year in Art, S.H.Ervin Gallery, Sydney (2007). Ross won the 2015 Glennfiddich Artists Residency Prize.
Alfred was initially found by an Expedition from the American Museum of Natural History, New York and Columbia University in 1928 in what was then Belgian Congo. The expedition members were told that a pair of gorillas had been shot for ‘raiding’ a farmer's field for food, afterwards a baby was discovered and suckled by a local woman.H. Paddon, ‘Biological Objects and "Mascotism": The Life and Times of Alfred the Gorilla’ in S.J.M.M. Alberti, The Afterlives of Animals - A Museum Menagerie (2011) The baby gorilla was later sold to a Greek merchant and taken to the town of Mbalmayo in modern-day Cameroon, where the expedition encountered him playing in the streets. He was described by the Expedition as ‘the liveliest specimen of his kind we had ever seen’.Ray Barnett, ‘The Dictator of Bristol’ in Nonesuch, the University of Bristol Magazine, Spring 1999, p38.
This seems to reflect a situation where, at the time of the name's formation, Cumbria was still predominantly a Celtic-speaking region, and sometimes part of the Kingdom of Strathclyde, and English settlement or land-ownership was still unusual enough to be a distinctive feature in a place-name. Noting that the other place-names of this kind are in places that were border areas between English-speaking and Britonnic-speaking cultures, Jayne Carroll and John Baker suggest that 'this is perhaps not a case of a "minority population" name, but one used with a particular political significance to mark a borderland area'.John Baker and Jayne Carroll, 'The Afterlives of Bede’s Tribal Names in English Place-Names', in The Land of the English Kin: Studies in Wessex and Anglo-Saxon England in Honour of Professor Barbara Yorke, ed. by Alexander James Langlands and Ryan Lavelle, Brill's Series on the Early Middle Ages, 26 (Leiden: Brill, 2020), pp.
Jet Jan. 4, 1962 Page 63 New York Beat He came to Paris with the cast of Free and Easy.Jet 28 Nov 1968 29 Paris Sratched By Art Simmons In England he secured a starring role in the 1962 film All Night Long.Jet Jan. 4, 1962 Page 63 New York Beat In it he played the part of piano player Aurelius Rex in an Othello-like role who becomes victim of the devious and sinister motivated actions by his drummer Johnny Cousin, played by Patrick McGoohan. He is almost driven into an act of violence against his partner, singer Delia, played by Marti Stevens.Shakespeare and Music: Afterlives and Borrowings By Julie Sanders All That Jazz': Shakespeare and Musical Adaptation' 12Four Tragedies: Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth Edited by David Bevington and David Scott Kastan Page 309 Othello, The Moo of Venice on Screen In 1966, he had a part in an episode of The Baron which starred Steve Forrest, episode: There's Someone Close Behind You as Wayne.
News that President Roosevelt had been given a bone letter-opener by a congressman was widely reported in Japan. The Americans were portrayed as "deranged, primitive, racist and inhuman". That reporting was compounded by the previous May 22, 1944, Life magazine picture of the week publication of a young woman with a skull trophy, which was reprinted in the Japanese media and presented as a symbol of American barbarism, causing national shock and outrage.Dickey, Colin: Afterlives of the Saints Edwin P. Hoyt in Japan's War: The Great Pacific Conflict argues that two U.S. media reports of Japanese skulls and bones being sent home were exploited by Japanese propaganda very effectively, coupled to the Shinto religion, which places much higher emotional value on the treatment of human remains contributed to a preference to death over surrender and occupation, shown, for example, in the mass civilian suicides on Saipan and Okinawa after the Allied landings.

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