984 resultados para Coralina, Cora, 1889-1985


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Cora Coralina, poetisa goiana, por suas peculiaridades instigantes, tanto na vida pessoal quanto no âmbito literário, serve de grande atrativo para estudos estilísticos. Pretende-se aqui analisar estilisticamente seus poemas, a fim de se considerarem não só aspectos gramaticais, mas perceber a expressividade que contempla a obra da autora. Para tanto, são analisados recursos fônicos, sintáticos, semânticos, lexicais e morfológicos que compõem o seu estilo. Por ser (ex)cêntrica, diferente de uma maioria excludente e igual a uma minoria, Cora elabora seus poemas, representando não só sua própria vida, mas também as de um grupo de indivíduos que vivenciou, de certo modo, o mesmo que ela. Por meio da poesia, conta a história da Cidade de Goiás. Narra em forma de poema, descrevendo lugares, pessoas, situações, crenças e práticas de uma cidade repleta de preconceitos e de imposições sociais. No apogeu de sua arte, muitos se identificam com o conteúdo da sua obra, já que a literatura imita o real. A sua relevância se dá justamente porque trata a palavra poética com simplicidade, mas revelando toda sua potencialidade

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A presente dissertação, ensaio monográfico de cunho filosófico-literário-poético, insere-se na Linha de Pesquisa Infância, Juventude e Educação, do Programa de Pós-Graduação em Educação, da Faculdade de Educação, da Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro. Tem como proposta promover agenciamentos entre os filósofos Gilles Deleuze, Félix Guattari e a escritora Cora Coralina. Empreendemos uma releitura da obra completa de Cora Coralina que dá ênfase à Infância, à Escola e à Escrita -, inspirados em alguns conceitos filosóficos de Deleuze e Guattari, tais como multiplicidade, rizoma, devir, platô, literalidade, linha de fuga, desterritorialização e reterritorialização que postulam a realidade como multiplicidade e uma lógica, denominada rizomática, como alternativa à lógica clássica do pensamento e da ciência, considerada arborescente. A partir desses agenciamentos não prévios procuramos sistematizar essa releitura de Cora Coralina, buscando escrever em forma de platôs, zonas de intensidade contínua, que constituem um método, plano de composição das multiplicidades. A característica fundamental de um platô, que o difere de um capítulo, é que pode ser lido em qualquer posição e relacionado com outro. Deleuze e Guattari postulam percursos inéditos em relação à atividade literária, permitindo-nos inserir a escrita em um horizonte possível de emancipação, entendida aqui como desterritorialização e reterritorialização e não como demarcação e fixação em um território. A escrita de Cora Coralina evidencia esse modo de emancipação.

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Bibliography: leaves 37-38.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Title on two leaves. "First edition."

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This article presents an analysis of the book Amenina, o cofrinho e a vovó, by Cora Coralina (2009), as subsidy to relate intergenerational relationships between grandparents and grandchildren. Qualitative methodological path is formed by the use of some psychoanalytic concepts as reference for analyzing symbolic components present in the work. With the construction of a psychoanalytical study, the article highlights the importance of the construction of the symbolic links and intangible heritages transmitted between generations.

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Typescript about Julius and Paula (née Hirsch) Briske and their three children, Hans, Elisabeth, and Julius. Also included are Judge Briske’s letters of appointment.

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Parte 1 - Atos do Poder Legislativo

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Lewis Tyrell married Jane Gains on August 31, 1849 in Culpeper Court House, Virginia. Jane Gains was a spinster. Lewis Tyrell died September 25, 1908 at his late residence, Vine St. and Welland Ave., St. Catharines, Ont. at the age of 81 years, 5 months. Jane Tyrell died March 1, 1886, age 64 years. Their son? William C. Tyrell died January 15, 1898, by accident in Albany, NY, age 33 years, 3 months. John William Taylor married Susan Jones were married in St. Catharines, Ont. on August 10, 1851 by William Wilkinson, a Baptist minister. On August 9, 1894 Charles Henry Bell (1871-1916), son of Stephen (1835?-1876) and Susan Bell, married Mary E. Tyrell (b. 1869?) daughter of Lewis and Alice Tyrell, in St. Catharines Ontario. By 1895 the Bell’s were living in Erie, Pennsylvania where children Delbert Otto (b. 1895) and Edna Beatrice (b. 1897) were born. By 1897 the family was back in St. Catharines where children Lewis Tyrell (b. 1899), Gertrude Cora (b. 1901), Bessie Jane (b. 1902), Charles Henry (b. 1906), Richard Nelson (b. 1911) and William Willoughby (b. 1912) were born. Charles Henry Bell operated a coal and ice business on Geneva Street. In the 1901 Census for St. Catharines, the Bell family includes the lodger Charles Henry Hall. Charles Henry Hall was born ca. 1824 in Maryland, he died in St. Catharines on November 11, 1916 at the age of 92. On October 24, 1889 Charles Hall married Susan Bell (1829-1898). The 1911 Census of Canada records Charles Henry Hall residing in the same household as Charles Henry and Mary Bell. The relationship to the householder is step-father. It is likely that after Stephen Bell’s death in 1876, his widow, Susan Bell married Hall. In 1939, Richard Nelson Bell, son of Charles Henry and Mary Tyrell Bell, married Iris Sloman. Iris (b. 22 May 1912 in Biddulph Township, Middlesex, Ontario) was the daughter of Albert (son of Joseph b. 1870 and Elizabeth Sloman, b. 1872) and Josie (Josephine Ellen) Butler Sloman of London, Ont. Josie (b. 1891) was the daughter of Everett Richard and Elizabeth McCarthy (or McCarty) Butler, of Lucan Village, Middlesex North. According to the 1911 Census of Canada, Albert, a Methodist, was a porter on the railroad. His wife, Josephine, was a Roman Catholic. Residing with Albert and Josie were Sanford and Sadie Butler and Sidney Sloman, likely siblings of Albert and Josephine. The Butler family is descended from Peter Butler, a former slave, who had settled in the Wilberforce Colony in the 1830s. Rick Bell b. 1949 in Niagara Falls, Ont. is the son of Richard Nelson Bell. In 1979, after working seven years as an orderly at the St. Catharines General Hospital while also attending night school at Niagara College, Rick Bell was hired by the Thorold Fire Dept. He became the first Black professional firefighter in Niagara. He is a founding member of the St. Catharines Junior Symphony; attended the Banff School of Fine Arts in 1966 and also performed with the Lincoln & Welland Regimental Band and several other popular local groups. Upon the discovery of this rich archive in his mothers’ attic he became passionate about sharing his Black ancestry and the contributions of fugitive slaves to the heritage Niagara with local school children. He currently resides in London, Ont.

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Ridley College was conceived in 1888 by a group of Anglican clergy and laymen eager to establish a school for boys in Ontario that emphasized strong academic and religious values. The school was originally known as Bishop Ridley College, in tribute to Nicholas Ridley, a 16th century English churchman who was martyred during the Protestant Reformation for refusing to renounce his Anglican faith. The first facility was the stately and spacious Springbank Sanatorium; shortly thereafter, construction was begun across the old Welland Canal on a lower school for boys age 5 to 13 on the present-day campus site. The name “Springbank” stems from the name of the hotel constructed in 1864 by Dr. Theophilus Mack on Yates Street. Fortuitously, the directors of what would become Ridley College were looking to found a new boys’ school. The sale of the building was completed in 1888 and Ridley began operations in September 1889. In October 1903, the Springbank building complex was consumed by fire forcing the school to move across the canal to its modern western campus. The Ridley campus grew dramatically during the 1920's, and new buildings and facilities were added in each of the following decades. The school became co-educational in 1973; just over a dozen girls enrolled in the inaugural year, while today almost half of Ridley's students are girls. Adapted from: http://www.ridleycollege.com/podium/default.aspx?t=125335 (March 22, 2011)

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No presente artigo apresento resultados iniciais da pesquisa A imagem da polícia na literatura brasileira, na qual identifico e examino as imagens desta instituição elaboradas por escritores brasileiros em três momentos da história: os primeiros anos da república brasileira (1889-1910), a Era Vargas (1935-1945) e os anos de chumbo da ditadura civil-militar brasileira chegando até a abertura política (1969-1985). As imagens que compõem a primeira fase da pesquisa foram extraídas de obras de Machadode Assis, Aluízio de Azevedo, Lima Barreto e Jõao do Rio e foram publicadas nos anos em que tanto havia uma reforma política no Brasil (a passagem do sistema monárquico para o republicano), quanto estava em curso uma tentativa de reforma da instituição policial, tendo em vista a inserção de aspectos ditos mais científicos de investigação e de punição. O levantamento e a análise dos textos permite aquilatar as críticas feitas pelos escritores da época ao literaturizarem uma instituição problemática porque era eivada de preconceitos, atrasos e resistente a inovações. Além disso, aspectos ainda hoje presentes na crítica à polícia, tais como a violência desproporcional e a corrupção, comparecem na literatura produzida no período e possibilitam uma compreensão mais ampla da realidade policial desde o ponto de vista da arte literária.

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The spatial and temporal variations of Ross River virus infections reported in Queensland, Australia, between 1985 and 1996 were studied by using the Geographic Information System. The notified cases of Ross River virus infection came from 489 localities between 1985 and 1988, 805 between 1989 and 1992, and 1,157 between 1993 and 1996 (chi2(df = 2) = 680.9; P < 0.001). There was a marked increase in the number of localities where the cases were reported by 65 percent for the period of 1989-1992 and 137 percent for 1993-1996, compared with that for 1985-1988. The geographic distribution of the notified Ross River virus cases has expanded in Queensland over recent years. As Ross River virus disease has impacted considerably on tourism and industry, as well as on residents of affected areas, more research is required to explore the causes of the geographic expansion of the notified Ross River virus infections.