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| Path : General Resources > Digital Repositories |
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the UCLA Center for the Study of Women (CSW)      |
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General Resources->Digital Repositories General Resources->Libraries
This website is for the UCLA Center for the Study of Women. CSW is an internationally recognized center for research on gender, sexuality, and women's issues and the first organized research unit of its kind in the University of California system. CSW website includes a newsletter, a weekly email digest, databases, and videocasts. CSW Update is our monthly PDF newsletter featuring research articles, faculty profiles, and field reports. It is also available from the CSW site at the eScholarship Repository of the California Digital Library. Videocasts of many CSW events are available on UCLA's YouTube channel. Subscribers to our listserv get weekly emails on upcoming UCLA and community events, job opportunities, calls for papers, exhibits, and conferences. Our fans on Facebook and followers on Twitter also get regular updates.
URL : http://www.csw.ucla.edu/
Keyword(s) : Women
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Graphpad software      |
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General Resources->Digital Repositories
data analysis and biostatistics software and resources Since 1984, GraphPad Software has been dedicated to creating software exclusively for the international scientific community. Created by scientists for scientists, these intuitive programs provide researchers worldwide with some tools they need to simplify data analysis, statistics and graphing for free This data analysis program is especially useful for students who are study corpus linguistics which has to analyze data much more accurately.
URL : http://www.graphpad.com
Keyword(s) :
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Britannica.com: ¡°satire¡±      |
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General Resources->Digital Repositories English Literature->Literary History
This link is connected to the virtual Encyclopedia Britannica¡¯s entry for ¡°satire.¡± The entry is given in detail, starting with the main definition of the literary genre, followed by categories such as ¡°The nature of satire¡± (again, divided into: Historical definitions--Influence of Horace and Juvenal--Structure of verse satire--The satiric spirit), ¡°Satirical media¡± (:Literature--Drama--Motion pictures and television--Festivals--Visual arts), and ¡°The Satirist, the law, and society.¡± Each heading is self-explanatory, and the entry tries to examine the genre of satire and how it developed, why it is significant, and where it is used, etc. Categories such as ¡°Additional Reading,¡± ¡°Related Links,¡± and ¡°External Web sites¡± give additional resources where you can go to for further research.
URL : http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/524958/satire#
Keyword(s) : satire , definition of satire , verse satire , 18c British writing
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