Clouds and Sunshine Landscapes / seascapesClouds and Sunshine (1920) is a collection of poems by Sarah Lee Brown Fleming. Published during the Harlem Renaissance, Clouds and Sunshine is a powerful work of poetry exploring themes of faith, racial identity, loss, and love in twentieth century America. Recognized as a leading advocate for the advancement of Black girls and women throughout her life, Fleming is a writer whose voice never falters from the task at hand: telling the story of her
There is considerable hope that whole-genome gene function information may help predict phenotypes
the anniversary of his uncle Napoleon Bonaparte’s coronation and victory at Austerlitz
the beauty of the heavens
to the politics of catalogues and library data
ranging from desegregation to reading improvement
Generative magic-rhetoric creates novel possibilities for action
experienced in dealing with the day-to-day diseases in bananas
In a probing analysis that has broad implications for theories of reading
The chapter shows that exploring the genetic diversity of wild Oryza species may lead to identification of novel and superior alleles
and how they were treated
This development facilitated the geographic disconnection between food production and consumption
and how practices as well as memories of violence transform spatialities and temporalities of cities