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Rural Life
2059 results
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type
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year
description
Type
Writing
Title
Working for a Living
Year
2003
Mira Ptacin highlights the work of David Brennan, a funeral home director at Hobbs Funeral Home. Ptacin speaks to Brennan about his profession and the various job functions at a funeral home.
Type
Photography
Title
Tender Lines
Year
2014
Working for an escort business, women at Lovebirds speak about their mixed relationship with sex work. Hanna Wallis documents how the women feel about their work. Contains adult content.
Type
Photography
Title
Living With Glass
Year
2015
Ali Scattergood documents the work of Ben Coombs, a glassblowing artist from Portland.
Type
Photography
Title
Working for the Living
Year
2003
Erika Preuss captures the work of David Brennan, a funeral home director at Hobbs Funeral Home.
Type
Photography
Title
Living in Limbo
Year
2004
Sabrina Haley captures the work of the Troy Jackson, a state representative in Augusta.
Type
published content
Title
July 1984 Salt Magazine, Table of Contents
Year
1984
Table of contents for July 1984 Salt Magazine.
Type
published content
Title
Pilgrimage to Cape Porpoise
Year
1984
Information regarding Salt's Center for Field Studies and the visitors that Salt has received.
Type
Multimedia
Title
Remember me...A Rose
Year
2015
The case of Ashley Ouellette's murder is just one in over 120 unsolved homicides in the state of Maine. Lindsey Kilbridge investigates Ouellette's murder and why no one was ever charged with her murder.
Type
Radio
Title
Back to Pineland
Year
2020
Drive about 20 miles north of Portland, Maine and you’ll arrive at Pineland. It looks like a college campus: brick buildings with stately pillars, it’s surrounded by rolling hills. But Pineland’s exterior doesn’t tell you about its history. It opened as an institution for people with disabilities in 1908. Alexa Burke spoke with people who lived and worked at Pineland to learn about the history of institutionalization and the legacies that remain today.
Type
Radio
Title
Back to Pineland
Year
2020
Drive about 20 miles north of Portland, Maine and you’ll arrive at Pineland. It looks like a college campus: brick buildings with stately pillars, it’s surrounded by rolling hills. But Pineland’s exterior doesn’t tell you about its history. It opened as an institution for people with disabilities in 1908. Alexa Burke spoke with people who lived and worked at Pineland to learn about the history of institutionalization and the legacies that remain today.
Type
published content
Title
What Would You Like, Sir?
Year
1987
Introduction to three articles on how young Mainers feel about working in the tourist trade.
Type
published content
Title
Wharf at Work
Year
1987
For over 35 years, the Custom House Wharf has conducted business. Peter Millard explores how the people at the wharf have their own unwritten rules and way of doing things.
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