You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
New Orleans. 1905. Yellow Fever! With the death of their parents, sixteen-year old Marty Mckinstry and his brother and sister.are sent to separate homes. As Marty fights to reunite his family, they endure abusive orphanages, a voodoo baptism, bare-knuckle prize fighting, forced snake handling, and death threats from a powerful shipping magnate, Reginald Landus. When Marty meets and falls in love with a ranchers daughter, Celeste Byrd, her rejected suitor, Gavin York, follows them to New Orleans, vowing to kill them. The novel explores the depth of family love, as well as the love between a man and a woman
None
How can exhibitions not only stage existing knowledge, but also raise questions that lead to new research? This question has become ever more relevant due to the museum sector's growing interest in the development of thematic exhibitions that combine narratives and objects from art, science, cultural history, and everyday life. Using theories from interdisciplinarity studies, Henriette Pleiger identifies different ways of producing knowledge during the exhibition-making process, as well as the mechanisms that are necessary for an exhibition to be considered interdisciplinary. The development of such exhibitions can be understood as collaborative research processes.
None