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Low-Fat Love Stories

07/24/2024
Sadie Davenport
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Title: Low-Fat Love Stories. 

Author: Patricia Leavy & Victoria Scotti. 

Publication info: Rotterdam, The Netherlands : Brill. 2017. eBook. 

Location: Academic Search Complete

Description: American Fiction Awards 2018 - award-winning finalist in the category short stories! Low-Fat Love Stories is a collection of short stories and visual portraits based on interview research with women about a dissatisfying relationship with a romantic partner or relative, or their body image. The stories focus on settling in relationships, the gap between fantasies and realities, relationship patterns, divorce, abuse, childhood pain, spirituality, feeling like a fraud, growing older, and daily struggles looking in the mirror. Once upon a time and happily ever after take on new meaning as the women's stories reveal the underside of fairytales and toxic popular culture. Written in the first-person with language taken directly from each woman's interview, the stories are raw, visceral, and inspirational. As a collection, the stories and art set you on an emotional rollercoaster and illustrate the different forms “low-fat love” may take, and the quest for self-worth in the context of popular culture that tells women they are never enough. The authors developed an original method of “textual visual snapshots” for this book. Low-Fat Love Stories can be used in a range of courses in art education, gender/women's studies, popular culture, psychology, relational communication, sociology and social work; or as an exemplar in research or qualitative methods, narrative inquiry, arts-based research or creative writing courses; or it can be read entirely for pleasure by individuals or in book clubs.

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Location: Academic eBook Collection

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Title: Agent of Change : My Life Fighting Terrorists, Spies, and Institutional Racism. 

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Publication info: Montreal : McGill-Queen's University Press. 2023. eBook. 

Location: Academic eBook Collection

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Pictured below is the "Fly Room," a Drosophila (fruit fly) research lab at Columbia University, where in the early twentieth century, Nobel Prize-winning scientist Dr. Thomas Hunt Morgan and "the Fly Boys" made important discoveries about modern genetics. While Mendel founded the field of genetics, the "gene" was still an abstraction. Morgan was able to confirm that the chromosome is a physical unit of genetic material, and that the pairing of chromosomes results in genetic variance. This work also contributed to scientists' understanding of evolution. Morgan's work offered natural selection as a scientific explanation for evolution. 

      

Left: A luncheon held in "The Fly Room" in 1918. The Fly Room was reportedly small and cluttered. 

Right: The National Cancer Institute's diagram on DNA forming genes and chromosomes. 

 

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