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"Reeve, Charles"
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Lora Senechal Carney Receives the 2017 UAAC Recognition Award
2018
The University Art Association of Canada (UAAC) Recognition Award received by Lora Senechal Carney is presented. Established in 2010, the UAAC Recognition Award acknowledges members and non-members who have shown their devoted and unselfish service to the association, as well as their commitment to the ideals of the community. Carney was a sympathetic teacher at the University of Toronto's Scarborough campus, where she taught for many years and chaired its Division of Humanties, and being named Associate Professor Emerita upon her 2013 retirement.
Journal Article
Reviews : \John Ruskin: Artist and Observer\; \John Ruskin: Artist and Observer,\ by Christopher Newall
2014
A 2014 exhibition of primarily drawings and watercolors by John Ruskin is reviewed. Its accompanying catalog is also reviewed.
Journal Article
ANDY WARHOL'S DEATHS AND THE ASSEMBLY-LINE AUTOBIOGRAPHY
2011
By examining Andy Warhol's autobiographical publications in relation to his other literary and artistic production, his entourage's memoirs, and the larger historical/cultural context, this article shows that he constructed his written self as a precursor to coming notions of the distributed, fragmented and saturated subject.
Journal Article
The Kindness of Human Milk: Jess Dobkin's Lactation Station Breast Milk Bar
2009
[...]to spit something out, I must rst put it into my mouth to decide whether it is appetizing. [...]even if a thing is disgusting, it is nonetheless (which in this context also means therefore) tempting.1 A desire to promote such complexity made me seize the opportunity to host Jess Dobkins Lactation Station Breast Milk Bar in the gallery that I curate at the Ontario College of Art & Design (ocad) in Toronto. [...]the day before Dobkin distributed her press release, a featurein the New York Times detailed concern among public health ofcials in the United States over low levels of breast-feeding. [...]they take the blame for not breast-feeding. Medieval medical theory held that a mother was the ideal nurse for her child because breast milk was thought to be processed blood. [...]Bynum argues, What writers in the high Middle Ages wished to say about Christ the savior who feeds the individual soul with his own blood was precisely and concisely said in the image of the nursing mother whose milk is her blood, offered to the child.28 This language depended on a desexualized, defeminized understanding of mothering, which isolated nursing from its biological context so that it could link to the general conception of leadership, authority and pastoral concern.29 Signicantly, these nurturing authorities were exclusively male; female writers avoided this imagery.
Journal Article