By Sarah Elizabeth Scales, Post-Doctoral Researcher, Department of Environmental, Occupational, and Agricultural Health, University of Nebraska Medical Center
Blake Erhardt-Ohren, DrPH Candidate, University of California, Berkeley
Debarati Guha Sapir, Professor of Public Health, Université catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain)
Khidir Dalouk, Assistant Professor of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University
Rohini J Haar, Faculty, Epidemiology Division, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley
The work of estimating conflict mortality is difficult. But that doesn’t make this grim exercise, nor accounting for the broader effects of conflict, any less critical.
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By Natasha Beaumont, Lecturer in Creative Arts, School of Education and Social Work, University of Sydney
Monologue performance is a technically demanding but deeply rewarding form of theatre. Monologues are the purest form of storytelling an actor can engage in.
Before I was a drama teacher and researcher, I was an actor on stage and television in Australia and in the United Kingdom.
As an actor, you are always having to prepare monologues as audition pieces. Here are some principles and techniques to help you with this process, to allow you to draw in your audience and strengthen your artistic expression.
Choosing your monologue
Successful characterisation…
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By Prudence Gibson, Lecturer and researcher in Plant Humanities, UNSW Sydney
Prudence Gibson meets the woman behind the world’s most poisonous garden, and explains why even common plants such as azalea and dumbcane deserve our respect.
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