Matching Items (6)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

130145-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

Poster announcement for the 5-meeting series, "Jewish Literature, Identity and Imagination: A Reading and Discussion Series in American Libraries", sponsored by the American Library Association, Nextbook, Jewish Studies Program at ASU, and ASU Libraries. Led by Prof. Joe Lockard. August 26-December 9, 2008.

ContributorsLeket-Mor, Rachel (Organizer)
Created2008-08-26
130146-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

Poster announcement for the exhibit and public programs sponsored by the American Library Association, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, and ASU Libraries. November 14-December 16, 2011.

ContributorsLeket-Mor, Rachel (Organizer, Curator)
Created2011-11-14
130147-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

Poster of an exhibit at the ASU Music Library, in conjunction with the semester-long project "Ways of Happiness, Paths of Peace: Bernstein, Bloch, and Music of the Jewish Tradition". Spring 2007.

ContributorsMoore, David (Photographer) / Leket-Mor, Rachel (Curator)
Created2007-06-20
201355-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

Drawing on collective biography, memory work, and diffractive analysis, this chapter examines childhood memories of our entanglements with plants. By approaching research as a ceremony, our goal is to reanimate the relationships we have shared with plants and places, illuminating multiple intra-actions and weaving different worlds together.  Our collective ceremony

Drawing on collective biography, memory work, and diffractive analysis, this chapter examines childhood memories of our entanglements with plants. By approaching research as a ceremony, our goal is to reanimate the relationships we have shared with plants and places, illuminating multiple intra-actions and weaving different worlds together.  Our collective ceremony of re-membering brings into focus how plants called us forward, evoked our gratitude and reciprocity, shared knowledge, and offered comfort, companionship, love, belongingness, and understanding throughout life. The process of our collective re-membering and writing has turned into a series of ceremonial gatherings and practices, bringing forth vivid memories, poetic expressions, and creative drawings.  As humans, we have often (re)acted to plants’ generous gifts in meaningful gestures and communications that have co-created and made visible our deeply felt inter-species love and care.

Created2024 (year uncertain)
201006-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsAnayatova, Dilraba (Contributor) / Desimoni, Victoria (Contributor) / Goebel, Janna (Contributor) / Jordan, Michelle (Contributor) / Karsgaard, Carrie (Contributor) / Nabulega, Sandra (Contributor) / Nielsen, Ann (Contributor) / Pandua, Rajul (Contributor) / Silova, Iveta (Contributor) / Simunek, Charlotte (Contributor) / Weinberg, Andrea (Contributor) / Arthur, Kelvin (Reviewer) / Coats, Cala (Reviewer) / Duong, Hang (Reviewer) / Fischman, Gustavo (Reviewer) / Jenik, Adriene (Reviewer) / King, Jordan (Reviewer) / Oster, Nicole (Reviewer) / Arizona State University. Learning Futures Collaboratives. Education for Planetary Futures (Issuing body) / Arizona State University (Sponsor)
Created2024
201315-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

This article combines collective biography, diffractive analysis, and speculative fabulation to weave together
the authors’ childhood memories of “common worlding.” Our collective biography brings into focus how we
engaged in common worlding in our childhoods through dreaming, metamorphosis, and play by tactfully
moving across different worlds and learning with the human and more-than-human

This article combines collective biography, diffractive analysis, and speculative fabulation to weave together
the authors’ childhood memories of “common worlding.” Our collective biography brings into focus how we
engaged in common worlding in our childhoods through dreaming, metamorphosis, and play by tactfully
moving across different worlds and learning with the human and more-than-human others we encountered. As
we foreground childhood memory and its potential to reimagine pasts, presents, and futures, we explore what
kind of conditions are necessary to (re)attune ourselves to the multiple worlds around us in order to maintain
and nurture children’s—and our own—other-worldly connections.

Created2022-03