Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 16
pro vyhledávání: '"Megan Poole"'
Autor:
Megan Poole
Publikováno v:
Rhetoric Society Quarterly. 53:30-44
Publikováno v:
Family Relations, 1998 Apr 01. 47(2), 119-127.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/585615
Autor:
Megan Poole
Publikováno v:
Visual Communication Quarterly. 29:75-86
Autor:
Megan Poole, Kristi McClary King
Publikováno v:
ACSM'S Health & Fitness Journal. 26:57-60
Autor:
Megan Poole
Publikováno v:
Journal for the History of Rhetoric. 24:195-222
Accounts of the rhetorical tradition in early modern England often focus on the Royal Society of London and the scientific epistemologies and visual pedagogies surrounding technologies like the microscope. One critic of the Royal Society, Margaret Ca
Autor:
Megan Poole
Publikováno v:
Western Journal of Communication. 84:604-622
Many visual terms exist in Kenneth Burke’s rhetorical schema, yet the optical implications of such terms remain largely unconsidered by rhetorical scholars. This study presents Burke’s orientation ...
Autor:
Debra Hawhee, Megan Poole
Publikováno v:
Quarterly Journal of Speech. 105:418-440
When Kenneth Burke visited the Museum of Modern Art exhibition “Road to Victory: A Procession of Photographs of the Nation at War” in the summer of 1942, he most likely did not expect to le...
Publikováno v:
Clinical Case Studies. 18:254-269
Pain resulting from chronic medical conditions (CMCs) can create debilitating effects globally across domains of functioning in the lives of those it impacts. There currently remain no treatment options to eliminate associated pain entirely, leaving
Publikováno v:
Journal of health care for the poor and underserved. 31(3)
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with persistent physical and psychological impairments over time and intergenerational transmission of trauma. Few studies have examined contexts of acute adversity with an eye toward understanding
Autor:
Megan Poole
Publikováno v:
Twentieth-Century Literature. 62:345-349
Optical Impersonality: Science, Images, and Literary Modernism, by Christina Walter. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014. 352 pages. Fashioning a foundational book within contemporary modernist studies is a rare occurrence, especially when the text