Scholarly Works, English
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Research articles, presentations, and other scholarship
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Browsing Scholarly Works, English by Content Type "Conference proceeding"
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- Bloody Men: Masculine Violence in the Filmic Worlds of Quentin TarantinoGreene, Justin R. (2021-04)Nine films into a supposed ten film oeuvre, Quentin Tarantino has clearly established himself as a contemporary auteur in not only the U.S. but also throughout the world. Each rumor of a new Tarantino project elicits wild speculation about the narrative, the castings, and the release date. Fans and film critics alike seek out any piece of evidence that will develop the picture around Tarantino’s vision. His vision is purposeful, and he intends to craft films that reflect his interests, his ideologies, and his engagement with the larger discourses of society and culture. In a 2014 interview conducted by his friend and fellow director Richard Rodriguez, Tarantino defines the way he perceives his filmography: “A filmography is not a hit-or-miss thing. You have a vision. You have a voice. And each new film is your new conversation” (Tarantino, “Quentin Tarantino 2014 Interview…”). The authorial voice and the artist’s interaction with the world emerge as controlling ideas for Tarantino. In essence, his identity is built through his filmic art...
- Open Access Dissemination Challenges: A Case StudyRadcliffe, David H.; Stovall, Connie; Young, Philip (Virginia Library Association, 2007-11-01)
- Representing Diversity in Digital Research: Digital Feminist Ethics and Resisting Dominant NormativesBaniya, Sweta; Hutchinson, Les; Kumari, Ashanka; Larson, Kyle; Lindgren, Chris A. (The WAC Clearinghouse, 2019)In this paper, the authors consider how their engaged practices of feminist ethics have come up against specific dominant normatives. Privileging the experiences of women of color, they question the embodied relationship they have with their research participants, and offer their methodological approaches for addressing ethical challenges that have surfaced through conducting their research in both digital and non-digital spaces and places. Collectively, they collaborate to develop newfound strategies and methodologies for negotiating the often mundane, micro-level moments of friction that prevents intersectional phronesis. Overall, they pitch ethical research practices for digital and non-digital research with diverse subjects of different races, backgrounds, and cultures such that voice(s) are not compromised during research.