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Capacity handling : a necessity in Linux clustersLyshaugen, Thomas January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Pole de Calcul Parallele,05 January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Computer availability within a computer clusterLindberg, Björn January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Capacity handling : a necessity in Linux clustersLyshaugen, Thomas January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Die Adjectiva im Beowulfepos als DarstellungmittelScheinert, Moritz Friedrich, January 1905 (has links)
Inaug. -diss. - Leipzig. / Vita. "Die arbeit erscheint gleichzeitig in den Beiträgen zur geschichte der deutschen sprache und literatur', bd. 30 (1905), 345 ff."
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Water imagery and the baptism motif in BeowulfMann, Betty Tucker 08 1900 (has links)
Functioning on three distinct but coexistent levels, water imagery unifies Beowulf. On the first level, that of conscious symbolism, Beowulf's three water adventures develop the triple immersion motif present in Anglo-Saxon baptism ritual. On the second level, that of the poet's personal unconscious, the water monsters against whom Beowulf struggles symbolize the hero's Shadow, his fallen nature in which lurk inadmissable and anarchic desires. On the deepest level, that of the port's collective unconscious, the water monsters are symbols for the archetypal Mother to whose womb the hero of myth strives to return in order to achieve immortality by means of rebirth.
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The Romanticizing of Germanic EpicLoughridge, James, III January 1940 (has links)
No description available.
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Geração e difusão de conhecimento em sistemas locais de produção/Silva, Gabriela Scur January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Tese (Doutorado em Engenharia de Produção) - Escola Politécnica da Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, 2006
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Beowulf, sleep, and judgment dayHanchey, Ginger Fielder 15 May 2009 (has links)
When warriors fall asleep within Heorot’s decorated walls, they initiate a
sequence of events that ultimately ends in slaughter and death. This pattern of sleep,
attack, and death predictably appears in each of the monster episodes. Humans sleep
and fall prey to an otherworld attacker, who eventually receives death as punishment.
Interestingly, the roles of the characters are reversed in the dragon scene. Here, the
dragon’s sleep exposes him to harm at the hands of a human, the thief, whose guilt is
transferred to Beowulf. In this way, sleep designates the victims and the attackers, but it
also helps the audience predict the judgment that will take place at the end of each
episode.
This judgment becomes specifically Christian when contextualized by other
Anglo-Saxon accounts of sleep. As in these texts, sleep in Beowulf functions as a
liminal zone connecting the world of the humans with an Otherworld. The intersection
of these worlds in Beowulf follows the structural paradigm of the popular “Doomsday
motif,” in which an angry Christ comes to earth to surprise a sleeping humanity. A
study of the verbal and thematic similarities of Beowulf and Christ III best exemplifies
this connection. Other mythographic traditions of Christian judgment within Anglo Saxon texts appear throughout Beowulf. Motifs of Christ’s second coming surround
Grendel as he approaches Heorot, and his entrance echoes Christ’s harrowing of Hell.
The fight in Grendel’s mother’s lair recalls redemption through water: Beowulf’s
immersion represents baptism and the hilt of the sword which saves the Danish nation
depicts the great Flood. Finally, the dragon’s fire and its resulting annihilation of a
people, at least indirectly, resounds with apocalyptic undertones.
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Letters to an antiquary : the literary correspondence of G.J. Thorkelin, 1752-1829Wood, Elizabeth Harriet Harvey January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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