David Woodard
American yunyuuna la gɔnseto
David James Woodard (/ˈwʊdɑːrd/ (help·info); ba yuum dɔgɛ e la 6 Dawalega 1964) dela American yunyuuna la gɔnseto.[1][2][3][4]
David Woodard | |
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Santa Barbara (en) , Dawalega 6, 1964 (run 60) | |
Country of citizenship | United States of America (en) Canada (mul) |
Spouse | Sonja Vectomov (en) (Sakutega 18, 2014) |
Education | |
Educated at | University of California, Santa Barbara (en) Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts (en) San Marcos High School (en) |
Languages spoken, written or signed | English (en) |
Occupation | |
Occupation | composer (en) , conductor (en) la writer (en) |
Work location | United States of America (en) la Canada (mul) |
Genre | postmodernism (en) |
Religion or worldview | Buddhism (en) |
davidwoodard.com | |
Gɔnɔ
demese- Kerekes, D., Headpress 25 (Manchester: Critical Vision, 2003)
- Kracht, C., & D. Woodard, Five Years (Hannover: Wehrhahn Verlag, 2011)
- Tenaglia, F., Momus—A Walking Interview (Milan: Noch Publishing, 2015)
- Allen, B., Pelican (London: Reaktion Books, 2019)
- Chandarlapaty, R., Seeing the Beat Generation (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2019)
- Horzon, R., The White Book (Berlin: Suhrkamp, 2021)
Viisɔgɔ lɔgerɔ
demese- ↑ Carpenter, S., "In Concert at a Killer's Death", Los Angeles Times, 9 Siibedaa Kàrún, 2001.
- ↑ Epstein, J., "Rebuilding a Home in the Jungle" , San Francisco Chronicle, 13 Kilinkiiŋa 2005.
- ↑ Allen, M., "Décor by Timothy Leary", The New York Times, 20 Ko'oro 2005.
- ↑ Woodard, “Musica lætitiæ comes medicina dolorum”, Der Freund, Nr. 7, Kilinkiiŋa 2006, pp. 34–41.