Listening to Old Voices

Listening to Old Voices
Author: Patrick B. Mullen
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 318
Release: 1992
Genre: Aged
ISBN: 9780252018084

Patrick Mullen examines how elderly people use folk traditions to engage others and pass on their wisdom and knowledge to succeeding generations. Based on interviews with nine people in their seventies and eighties who live in rural Virginia, North Carolina, and southern Ohio, this book shows how folklore enriches people's lives. Mullen places the folklore - local legends, jokes, personal-experience narratives, family history, folk medicine, planting signs, foodways, wood carving, belief systems, customs, folk architecture - within the context of the individuals' life stories and the culture of their local communities. The analysis concentrates on recurring themes in each person's folklore and the rhetorical strategies the storytellers use to interest listeners and assure that their traditions will be passed on.

Architectural Voices

Architectural Voices
Author: David Littlefield
Publisher: Wiley
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2007-12-10
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780470016732

If a building could speak, what would it say? What would it sound like? Would it be worth listening to? This book treats buildings as deeply human creations - built by people for people; they come to embody the dreams, imaginings and stories that take place within them. David Littlefield and Saskia Lewis argue that buildings have voices and that it is worth listening to what they have to say. By focusing on elderly structures that are the subject of reinvention, this book examines how the buildings guide architects and artists. These reinventions, or re-imaginings, are not merely examples of straightforward conservation, nor simple exercises in contrasting old and new; they represent a more sensitive, personal approach to creative reuse. The authors' accounts of more than 20 historic buildings and their interviews with the people responsible for renewing them, demonstrate that the poetic qualities of the places we inhabit are not limited to just architectural style. In this book, the voices of an abandoned cathedral, a former brothel, a stately home and a Royal Mail sorting office reveal themselves. Listening to these voices opens up a new dimension to understanding the lives and meanings of old buildings.

Listening to the Voices

Listening to the Voices
Author: Charles East
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1998
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780820319940

If you have Voices you'd better listen to them Flannery O'Connor once said. Since 1982 the University of Georgia Press has published the winners of the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction, one of the country's most prestigious literary awards. Now celebrating its fifteenth year, the award continues to introduce some of the most exciting new voices in fiction writing today. Listening to the Voices is a dazzling collection of stories from the most recent winners of the award.

Voices in the Night

Voices in the Night
Author: Flora Annie Webster Steel
Publisher:
Total Pages: 436
Release: 1900
Genre: English fiction
ISBN:

"The new year was already some hours old, but the world to which it had come was still dark. Dark with a curious obscurity, that was absolutely opaque yet faintly luminous, because of the white fog which lay on all things and hid them from the stars; for the sky above was clear, cold, almost frosty. That was why the fog, born, not of cool vapour seeking for cloud life among the winds of heaven, but of hot smoke loving the warmth of dust and ashes, clung so closely to the earth; to its birthplace. It was an acrid, bitter smoke, not even due to the dead hearthfires of a dead day, since they--like all else pertaining to the domestic life of India--give small outward sign of existence, but to the smouldering piles of litter and refuse which are lit every evening upon the outskirts of human habitation. Dull heaps with a minimum of fire, a maximum of smoke, where the humanity which has produced the litter, the refuse, gathers for gossip or for warmth. Even in the fields beyond the multitude of men, where some long-limbed peasant, watching his hope of harvest, dozes by a solitary fire, this same smoke rises in a solid column, until--beaten down by the colder moister air above--it drifts sideways to spread like a vast cobweb over the dew-set carpet of green corn. ... --Taken from prologue

The Introspective Art of Mark Twain

The Introspective Art of Mark Twain
Author: Douglas Anderson
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 301
Release: 2017-04-20
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 150132957X

The Introspective Art of Mark Twain is a major new assessment of a towering American writer. Seeking to trace the development of Mark Twain's imagination, Douglas Anderson begins near the end of Twain's life, with the long dialogue What Is Man? that Twain published anonymously in 1906. In Twain's view, the little-read What Is Man? lies at the heart of his creative life. It is the central aesthetic testament that he employed to tell the story of his artistic evolution. Anderson follows the contours of that story as it unfolds over Twain's career. The portrait that emerges addresses the full scope of Twain's achievement, drawing on his autobiographical and travel writings, as well as the published and unpublished works of fiction that are by now deeply embedded in the world literary canon. “Steer by the river in your head,” Mark Twain's master pilot, Horace Bixby, once advised him, when the opaque atmosphere of the outer world made it impossible to see the actual Mississippi through which Twain was trying to guide his steamboat. For the purposes of this book, the river in one's head is not a mental construct of the physical world but the riverine networks of consciousness itself: the river that is the mind. The detailed discussions of individual books that structure each chapter direct the attention of Mark Twain's students and admirers, through inward rather than outward channels, toward a fuller appreciation for his legacy.

Diverse Voices in Educational Practice

Diverse Voices in Educational Practice
Author: Alexandra Sewell
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 121
Release: 2022-11-14
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1000773876

This practical workbook supports teachers seeking to sensitively understand and respond to the opinions and perceptions of critical stakeholders in student learning and development; pupil voice, parent voice, and professional voice are introduced and explored. A wide range of expert educator and academic contributors ensure that diverse voices are meaningfully understood, with chapters placing an emphasis on minority and traditionally marginalised groups, including SEND, LGBTQIA+, and Global Majority students. The workbook advocates a clear and inclusive ethos and demonstrates how voice work can help to decolonise the curriculum, promote a positive LGBTQIA+ friendly school climate, and value pupil involvement. Moments for personal reflection, activities, and action plans allow practitioners to consider the role they play in facilitating the effective inclusion of those not normally involved in knowledge construction and decision-making processes. Blending key theory with practical strategies and takeaways, this workbook is an essential tool for practising primary and secondary teachers and teaching assistants, as well as educational psychologists, school counsellors, and other educational professionals interested in promoting inclusive voice practices.

The Way of Being Lost

The Way of Being Lost
Author: Victoria Price
Publisher: Courier Dover Publications
Total Pages: 356
Release: 2018-01-15
Genre: Self-Help
ISBN: 0486825671

In this intimate, inspiring guide to finding one's path, the daughter of Vincent Price shares her journey toward accepting his legacy of remaining curious, giving back, practicing joy, and saying yes.

Resting in the Heart

Resting in the Heart
Author: Paul Feider
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 103
Release: 2001-11-15
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1579108075

Resting In The Heart is a book which invites people to discover and develop a scriptural way of allowing God's unconditional love to heal the inner and physical wounds of their lives. It offers its readers a gentle way of coming home to the Love that created them, a love that heals and quenches the deepest human longing. In a very sound yet simple way it uses critical, scriptural scholarship to introduce the reader to the personal, unconditional love that sustained Jesus and empowered His healing ministry. Resting In The Heart describes a listening spirituality which leads its readers along the journey of inner healing in a way that is inviting and freeing. This book offers simple, clear steps, along with scriptural reflections to assist people in getting free from childhood memories that stifle their adult life, especially in the areas of fear, shame, unresolved grief, and unnamed anger. It also equips the reader to become a vessel of healing love to others. The language of this book is very understandable and it cuts across denominational lines, inviting all people to discover the healing love flowing from the heart of God.

Living with Voices

Living with Voices
Author: M. A. J. Romme
Publisher: Gwasg y Bwthyn
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2009
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9781906254223

Provides the evidence to show it's possible to overcome problems with hearing voices and take back control of one's life.

Night Voices

Night Voices
Author: Heather Laskey
Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2003-11-14
Genre: History
ISBN: 0773571426

It is the story of Poland in the years leading up to the war, the horrors Polish Jews faced during the Nazi occupation, the brief period of hope when they believed they were building a better society, and their gradual disillusionment as state sponsored corruption, brutality, Stalinist paranoia, and anti-Semitism developed. The story is told through the memories of four people, Stasia Alapin Rubilowicz, her husband Mietek Rubilowicz, her son Peter Alapin, and her friend Alina. Life in Poland before and during the war is seen primarily through Stasia's eyes, who evokes her youth in an affluent family, largely assimilated into Polish society. This life was shattered forever in her early adulthood when the Nazis invaded, bringing death and destruction to Poland and to Polish Jews in particular. She recounts the anguish of life in the Warsaw Ghetto, her escape from it, her survival on the run, her betrayal to the Gestapo by a woman who had known her at school, and her rescue from prison by Christian Polish friends at the risk of their lives. In the second half of the book we are introduced to Mietek and her friend Alina, who describe their experiences in Poland during and after the war and their hopes that communism would rid the country of bigotry injustice, and want. But as old hatreds, now supported by a perverted catechism of socialist dogma, reawakened anti-Semitism they became increasingly disillusioned, ultimately deciding they had no recourse but to leave Poland and start a new life elsewhere. By 1968 the Polish communist leadership, through a campaign of intimidation and harassment, had succeeded in ridding Poland of virtually all its surviving Jews.Night Voices is a testimony both to the strength of the human spirit and to our capacity for self-delusion.