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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Elizabeth Anne Hin
In Artifactual, Elizabeth Anne Davis explores how Cypriot researchers, scientists, activists, and artists process and reckon with civil and state violence that led to the enduring division of the island, using forensic and documentary materials to retell and recontextualize conflicts between and within the Greek-Cypriot and Turkish-Cypriot communities. Davis follows forensic archaeologists and anthropologists who attempt to locate, identify, and return to relatives the remains of Cypriots killed in those conflicts. She turns to filmmakers who use archival photographs and footage to come to terms with political violence and its legacies. In both forensic science and documentary filmmaking, the dynamics of secrecy and revelation shape how material remains such as bones and archival images are given meaning. Throughout, Davis demonstrates how Cypriots navigate the tension between an ethics of knowledge, which valorizes truth as a prerequisite for recovery and reconciliation, and the politics of knowledge, which renders evidence as irremediably partial and perpetually falsifiable.
In Artifactual, Elizabeth Anne Davis explores how Cypriot researchers, scientists, activists, and artists process and reckon with civil and state violence that led to the enduring division of the island, using forensic and documentary materials to retell and recontextualize conflicts between and within the Greek-Cypriot and Turkish-Cypriot communities. Davis follows forensic archaeologists and anthropologists who attempt to locate, identify, and return to relatives the remains of Cypriots killed in those conflicts. She turns to filmmakers who use archival photographs and footage to come to terms with political violence and its legacies. In both forensic science and documentary filmmaking, the dynamics of secrecy and revelation shape how material remains such as bones and archival images are given meaning. Throughout, Davis demonstrates how Cypriots navigate the tension between an ethics of knowledge, which valorizes truth as a prerequisite for recovery and reconciliation, and the politics of knowledge, which renders evidence as irremediably partial and perpetually falsifiable.
The Dawn of Redeeming Grace
Elizabeth Anne Freeman
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2012
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Sufficiency, or The Recompense of Sunshine
Elizabeth Anne Socolow
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2012
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After the Letting Go
Elizabeth Anne Socolow
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2012
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What People Do in the Dark
Elizabeth Anne Socolow
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2012
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James and the Dragon Oracle
Elizabeth Anne Roberts
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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Share a Pair of Stories 2012: A Day to Remember
Elizabeth-Anne Kim
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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Leave a Little Legacy: Write the Stories of Your Life in a Year
Elizabeth-Anne Kim
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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Summer Porches and Unfinished Conversations
Elizabeth Anne Socolow
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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She Stood So at That Age
Elizabeth Anne Socolow
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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At Liberty in Fierce Attachment
Elizabeth Anne Socolow
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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Introduction of the Operating Room Assistant to the Surgical Environment
Elizabeth Anne Nideffer
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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James has a Wonderful Time
Elizabeth Anne Roberts
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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The Daughters of the Baron
Elizabeth Anne Roberts
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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There had always been a mystery in Baron Andr 's life. He had managed to get leave from the army when his third child was due to be born. He had arranged with his stable master for his son to take his two young daughters out for a picnic when his wife went into labour and keep them out as long as he could. When they arrived home the first thing they asked was had baby Caroline been born? When he said they were going to call her Pamela, they insisted her name was Caroline. After supper he took them up to see the baby and after they were sent to bed he told his wife that the girls wanted to call her Caroline. 'It's a nice name'. She told him. 'If you like it we could go along with their choice.' The really odd thing was that everyone who had been in the inn had been told the name when the girls had stopped at the village fountain and had spoken with the Publican's wife and told her it was a girl and she was called Caroline. In Bel Isle, the capital City of Zanabaria the children of the King, Luke and Patricia were growing up. The Prince would be expected to have an army career and his first posting away from Bel Isle was to Seal on the eastern coast where Baron Andr was stationed. In the very south west of the Kingdom, the Earl of Marchwood on the east border with Lyoness, were surprised to receive an invitation from the Caliph of Darashanda. He consulted with his Duke and decided that he should accept. 'They want something.' the Duke said. 'I wonder what.'
The Sheriff of Silver City
Elizabeth Anne Roberts
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
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