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시청각 문서 /documents

시청각 Audio Visual Pavilion

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«홀(HALL)» 김동희 장영규 2020 7월 17일(금) – 8월 30일(일) 시청각 랩 서울 용산구 용문동 38-118, 1층 효창원로 25길 9, 1층 관람 시간 화요일 – 일요일 오후 2시 – 7시 (매주 월요일 휴관) 기획 현시원 후원 한국문화예술위원회 «HALL» Donghee Kim Young-gyu Jang July 17 (Fri) – August 30 (Sun), 2020 AVP lab 1F 38-118 Yongmun dong, Yongsan-gu, Seoul Hyochangwon-ro 25 Gil, 9 Opening hours Tuesdays – Sundays 2 – 7pm (Closed on Mondays) Curated by Seewon Hyun Supported by Arts Council Korea
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Alastair Calhoun documents some of his time as they travel through parts of the Appalachian wilderness, through the deep forests of an age old area. We'll hear bits and pieces of this travelers time and what he chooses to document during their journey in these bite sized episodes. A one person casual podcast by a novice
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The Founding Documents Podcast is a periodic showcase peresented by LearnOutLoud.com of Early American historical documents in audio format. Here you will be able to listen to the declarations, speeches and essays that form the core principles of U.S. Government. For more educational audio and video, please visit www.learnoutloud.com.
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A podcast by Lucy Underwood about history, researching history, and the joy of finding diamonds when we search the archives for the dust of past lives. I aim to tell lively stories by seeking out the voices of the past, encoded in the archives, and letting them speak. My research mostly focuses on Tudor and Stuart England. I’m a historian and writer. My historical writing has appeared in various scholarly journals and books, while my first novel, an Elizabethan adventure titled ’The Guest of ...
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Raven Documents

Steve Raven

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Socio-cultural sports research. A series of episodes with guests, calls to participate in socio-cultural sports research, reviews of publications, exploring of seminal social theories to discuss a range of issues introducing a social analysis of contemporary issues in sport and physical education: whiteness, maleness, gender issues and social justice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This podcast was developed as part of an elementary-level Clark County School District Teaching American History Grant. The three-year grant will fund six modules per year with each module focusing on a different era of American history and a different pedagogical theme. This podcast focuses on the American Revolution and Primary Source Documents in Elementary Schools. Participants in the grant are third, fourth, and fifth grade teachers in Clark County (the greater Las Vegas area), Nevada. ...
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I talk to Dr Katie McKeogh about how music was first printed, what that did to how people heard and played music, and how we can trace this story in the libraries where their music books have come to rest. And about finding slanderous gossip in the margins of contraband liturgy books.द्वारा lau20
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Children's antics and domestic theatre in the 1660s, as William Blundell - Lancashire gentleman, Royalist solider, recusant, amateur antiquarian - writes play-scrips for his children in which they make fun of him behind his back...Many thanks for my brother, daughter and nieces for lending their dramatic talents to bring the Blundells to life! Epis…
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Alban - first known Christian in Britain, executed by the Romans for hiding a priest. Recusants - shorthand for English Catholics who rejected the Protestant Reformation, and occasionally got executed for hiding priests. This episode is about fights over who owns history, school plays in the 1600s, and naming your kids after prisons.…
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Elections in the 1600s: Elections by show of hands, votes for saltpans, and did women vote? I talk to Dr Simon Healy about how Members of Parliament were chosen in Tudor & Stuart England, why people stood for Parliament, who got to vote, where, and why, and how elections were run.द्वारा lau20
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Elizabeth Cary, Lady Falkland, lived from 1586-1639. She was a writer and translator, was seen as eccentric, was a Catholic convert when it wasn't strictly legal - and may have been autistic. Her "Life", composed and preserved by her daughters, records her struggles to be an intellectual woman, a Catholic, and a mother - and their struggles to be d…
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If you are a dissident who wants to uphold the Law, while breaking unjust laws, what do you do? Especially when you’re on trial for breaking a law you don’t believe in. This episode is about some examples of what you might do, from Catholics in Elizabethan England.द्वारा lau20
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Undergraduates of physical education, sports subjects and outdoor education wishing to signup to participate in the research study use these links: https://steveraven.com/participate https://steveraven.com/research_signup Email: steve.raven@research.uni.worc.ac.uk For everyone else to get regular updates on research progress and to participate in o…
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Steve Raven on doing research and reporting its findings: https://www.steveraven.com/ Steve Raven on Twitter: https://twitter.com/steveraven_frsa To participate in our socio-cultural sports research studies check-out: https://www.steveraven.com/participate/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.…
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The All-African People’s Conference was a series of meetings of anti-imperialism political parties, leaders of various ethnic groups, labor union representatives, and anyone else who believed Africa should be returned to the communities from which the European powers took it. This document contains excerpts from the resolution drafted by the Confer…
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The ‘New Internationalist Magazine’ is a British nonprofit publishing cooperative. This text contains excerpts pertaining to the history of and issues related to Pan-Africanism. One prominent debate among historians is the issue over whether the decolonization that occurred during the Cold War was caused by structural issues in the imperial nations…
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The idea of Americanization emerged in the early 20th century in the period just before WWI. During this time, a huge influx of immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe were arriving on America's shores. From the 1890s until the mid 1920s, over 22 million Europeans immigrated to the US from places like Italy, Greece, and Poland. Many Americans w…
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“Between the end of the Civil War and the early 20th century, the United States underwent one of the most rapid and profound economic revolutions any country has experienced. There were numerous causes for this explosive economic growth. The country enjoyed abundant natural resources, a growing supply of labor, an expanding market for manufactured …
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If one thing characterized early 20th century cities, it was their immigrant character. The “new immigration” from southern and eastern Europe had begun around 1890 but reached its peak during the Progressive era. Between 1901 and the outbreak of World War I in Europe in 1914, some 13 million immigrants came to the United States, the majority from …
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Between 1885 and 1920, approximately 21,000,000 immigrants arrived in America. Roughly 75 percent (75%) of them entered through New York Bay and were processed at Ellis Island after the immigration station opened in 1892. The arrival of immigrants from new parts of the world brought fears of new diseases and new germs being introduced to the United…
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Assimilation is when a minority group adopts the beliefs, culture, and way of life of the dominant culture. During the 1890s-1900s Americans wanted the “new” immigrants to stop following their old culture and beliefs, such as religion, traditions, and customs, and instead adopt the ideals and characteristics of Americans to create one homogenous cu…
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Hilda Polacheck, a WPA writer, interviewed Louis T. in June 1939 as part of the Federal Writers’ Project in the 1930’s. Louis T. was a Polish Jew. Below is an excerpt from the interview, which can be found in American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936-1940.
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