581 research outputs found

    “Collateral Damage in the War on Travel Writing”: Recovering Reader Responses to Contemporary Travel Writing

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    Scholarship of travel writing has seldom paid proper attention to questions of how and why readers engage with the genre – an oversight which, as Robin Jarvis (2016) has noted, at times leads to negative generalizations about travel writing’s presumed audience. This article examines this issue, and considers ways of recovering actual reader responses – through surveys of online reviews, and qualitative interviews. The article outlines findings from a structured group discussion with six regular readers of travel writing. Particular attention is paid to the way these readers respond to the possible inclusion of fictional elements in notionally non-fictional travel books, with the discussion revealing a broad conservatism on this point, and a general rejection of fictionalisation as a travel writing practice. This finding is contrasted with ideas voiced during the author’s interviews with notable travel writing practitioners, revealing a significant tension between the production and reception of the genre

    The Lantern Vol. 59, No. 1, December 1991

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    • And I Believed Them • Silly Rabbit • The Sky Seemed Endless • Here Boy • Bill the Person • The Crash • Gifts of Edward Charles and Me • Inspiration Incorporated • The Last Morning • Something\u27s Fishy • The Comforter • The Castle Builders • Saturday Skeleton Crew • The Convent\u27s Light • In My Veins • My Own Little Hell • Idling • You Know Who You Are • Pooh • The Pondhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1140/thumbnail.jp

    The Lantern Vol. 60, No. 2, Summer 1993

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    • Wake • Misconception • Cliche • Standard Oil • Lake Effect • Charlotte • Psychedelic Iridescent Infidelity • A Playground in Winter • Shooting Pool with Angels • The Blood Through Our Veins • Iced Coffee • Buzz Kill • Immortality • Cathodic Union • Crush • Mushrooms • Conversing • Eggplant • A Letter to the Civil Rights Movement • Still Sitting, Contemplating • Sensible Love • Monsters Under the Bed • Poison Rock • Waiting at the Dentist • Fate • Static • The Three C\u27s • As We Frolic • Nest • A Bottle of Wine and Patsy Cline • Bottoms of Pages, Backs of Bookshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1143/thumbnail.jp

    Gendering the careers of young professionals: some early findings from a longitudinal study. in Organizing/theorizing: developments in organization theory and practice

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    Wonders whether companies actually have employees best interests at heart across physical, mental and spiritual spheres. Posits that most organizations ignore their workforce – not even, in many cases, describing workers as assets! Describes many studies to back up this claim in theis work based on the 2002 Employment Research Unit Annual Conference, in Cardiff, Wales

    At the Brink of the Abyss: Incredibility and the Rhetoric of Truth-Telling in Patrick Leigh Fermor’s A Time of Gifts

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    This article argues that Patrick Leigh Fermor’s A Time of Gifts (1977) is characterised by a deep and unresolved tension between the deployment of truth-telling rhetoric – textual appeals to readerly credulity customarily such as acknowledgements of the limits of authorial memory and the inclusion of excerpts from journals – and the literal incredibility of its detail. A further complication introduced by Leigh Fermor’s inclusion in the text of excerpts from his youthful journals – notionally unedited but in fact partially fictionalised, as revealed by an examination of the archives. Though typically regarded as nonfiction, A Time of Gifts is, the article argues, a highly ambiguous text for which neither ‘fact convention’ nor ‘aesthetic convention’ are adequate modes of reception

    Essential Indonesian : phrasebook & dictionary

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    191 p. ; 21 cm

    Raffles dan Invasi Inggris ke Jawa

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